If you only see it as a "file storage project," then you're probably underestimating it.
**The Inherent Shortcomings of Blockchain**
Honestly, blockchain is particularly good at one thing—accounting. State changes, transaction confirmations, these are all straightforward. But recording and storing large amounts of data? Especially those that are dynamically changing? That's not blockchain's forte.
The reality is, whether it's AI applications or gaming assets, the truly valuable ones point to the same thing: data itself. What are the consequences of lacking a stable, user-friendly data layer? Difficulties in bringing smart applications on-chain, inability for game assets to evolve, and unstable decentralized websites.
**What is Walrus doing?**
Walrus's logic is quite straightforward: making data a first-class citizen on the chain.
Within this framework: - Smart contracts can directly call data - Content can be updated and iterated over time - NFTs are no longer just "links to images," but living, evolvable data containers
Why does the Sui official host blogs and documentation directly on Walrus? The reason lies here.
**Can the economic model hold up?**
Walrus's incentive scheme leans towards an infrastructure approach. Users prepay storage fees, and node rewards are not a one-time payout but gradually released over time. This design prioritizes long-term stability over short-term arbitrage opportunities.
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AirdropF5Bro
· 19h ago
To be honest, this is what the Sui ecosystem truly lacks.
View OriginalReply0
WalletDivorcer
· 01-10 07:05
Really, the data layer has been neglected for too long. Not all projects can grasp this layer.
View OriginalReply0
0xSunnyDay
· 01-08 18:52
Wait, NFT activation is really a genuine need, I hadn't considered this angle before.
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TestnetFreeloader
· 01-08 06:49
Wow, Sui, this move is really something. Finally, someone has figured out the data layer.
View OriginalReply0
BlockchainRetirementHome
· 01-08 06:48
Wow, this is the real foundational infrastructure approach. I was thinking wrong before.
View OriginalReply0
ContractSurrender
· 01-08 06:44
Oh, that's not right. The data layer stuff should have been prioritized long ago; no one explained it clearly to me before.
The Walrus idea definitely has some potential, and evolving NFTs sound really impressive.
Since the Sui official team is using it, the reliability should be pretty high, right?
View OriginalReply0
CommunityLurker
· 01-08 06:28
That's not right. Does this mean NFTs are truly alive now? Wouldn't all those dead images have been wasted mints?
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PonziDetector
· 01-08 06:23
Wait, can Walrus really turn NFTs into live data? If it can run stably, that's truly impressive.
Do you really understand what Walrus is doing?
If you only see it as a "file storage project," then you're probably underestimating it.
**The Inherent Shortcomings of Blockchain**
Honestly, blockchain is particularly good at one thing—accounting. State changes, transaction confirmations, these are all straightforward. But recording and storing large amounts of data? Especially those that are dynamically changing? That's not blockchain's forte.
The reality is, whether it's AI applications or gaming assets, the truly valuable ones point to the same thing: data itself. What are the consequences of lacking a stable, user-friendly data layer? Difficulties in bringing smart applications on-chain, inability for game assets to evolve, and unstable decentralized websites.
**What is Walrus doing?**
Walrus's logic is quite straightforward: making data a first-class citizen on the chain.
Within this framework:
- Smart contracts can directly call data
- Content can be updated and iterated over time
- NFTs are no longer just "links to images," but living, evolvable data containers
Why does the Sui official host blogs and documentation directly on Walrus? The reason lies here.
**Can the economic model hold up?**
Walrus's incentive scheme leans towards an infrastructure approach. Users prepay storage fees, and node rewards are not a one-time payout but gradually released over time. This design prioritizes long-term stability over short-term arbitrage opportunities.