I recently studied the Walrus project, and it’s quite interesting. As a decentralized storage solution in the Sui ecosystem, it is specifically optimized for large file scenarios such as images, videos, and AI datasets. What is its core competitive advantage? Red Stuff encoding technology. Based on this technology, Walrus performs quite solidly in blob storage efficiency, persistence, and cost control.
Compared to traditional centralized storage solutions, the advantages are quite obvious—higher security, strong programmability, which are all plus points for NFT projects, blockchain games, and data needs in the AI field. Imagine applications that require long-term, stable data storage; using this solution can save a lot of trouble.
The project’s token $WAL is also designed quite balanced, serving both payment functions and governance participation. Considering the explosive growth in data storage needs for AI applications, infrastructure projects like Walrus indeed have the opportunity to play a key role. This is what Web3 needs—projects that are not impatient, truly dedicated to technological breakthroughs.
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PrivateKeyParanoia
· 01-09 09:11
Red Stuff coding sounds pretty hardcore, but to be honest, I'm a bit curious about how it actually performs in practice.
I just think that these kinds of infrastructure projects are easily overlooked, but they are indeed essential.
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SerRugResistant
· 01-08 12:32
Red Stuff coding system sounds pretty impressive, but how many of them can actually be implemented?
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FOMOSapien
· 01-08 11:56
Are Red Eye Coding really that awesome? It feels a bit overrated.
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LuckyBearDrawer
· 01-08 11:45
Oh, forget it. It's about storage and encoding again. It sounds pretty advanced, but I actually don't quite understand it.
Can this thing really reduce costs that much? Feels more like armchair theorizing.
What does $WAL say? Let's see if it can actually be put into practical use later.
Why do all projects now boast about being "not impatient" haha.
I just want to know what this thing really does for ordinary users.
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ColdWalletGuardian
· 01-08 11:42
Red Stuff coding really helped me understand it clearly. Finally, someone is willing to seriously build the infrastructure.
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MetaMaskVictim
· 01-08 11:37
No, is Red Stuff encoding really that awesome? It feels like all the hype in the market is the same.
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VibesOverCharts
· 01-08 11:37
Redstuff encoding is indeed powerful, but can it really outperform IPFS?
I recently studied the Walrus project, and it’s quite interesting. As a decentralized storage solution in the Sui ecosystem, it is specifically optimized for large file scenarios such as images, videos, and AI datasets. What is its core competitive advantage? Red Stuff encoding technology. Based on this technology, Walrus performs quite solidly in blob storage efficiency, persistence, and cost control.
Compared to traditional centralized storage solutions, the advantages are quite obvious—higher security, strong programmability, which are all plus points for NFT projects, blockchain games, and data needs in the AI field. Imagine applications that require long-term, stable data storage; using this solution can save a lot of trouble.
The project’s token $WAL is also designed quite balanced, serving both payment functions and governance participation. Considering the explosive growth in data storage needs for AI applications, infrastructure projects like Walrus indeed have the opportunity to play a key role. This is what Web3 needs—projects that are not impatient, truly dedicated to technological breakthroughs.