Don’t be fooled by projects that only boast speed numbers. The true revolution is quietly happening at the foundational layer.
Take storage as an example. Web3 has been haunted by two curses: exorbitant costs and painfully slow speeds. Many solutions look flashy but are ultimately ineffective. That is until someone used a coding scheme called Red Stuff to handle this—dispersing your data like scattered puzzle pieces across the globe. The brilliance lies in the fact that even if some fragments are lost, the data can be instantly reconstructed, and the security needs no further explanation.
What’s the most realistic number? Storage costs are directly cut to a fraction of traditional decentralized solutions, sometimes even just 1%, with speeds increased by over ten times. This is not marketing talk; it’s a real solution to the century-old problem of expensive and slow Web3 storage.
Token design is also quite interesting. $WAL is not just fuel for payments; staking it allows you to share in the network’s growth rewards. But here’s the most heartening detail—over 60% of the tokens are directly allocated to the community, with only 7% going to early investors. The logic is clear: it’s not about cutting the leeks, but genuinely aiming for shared prosperity with users.
Thinking bigger, this system is built for the AI era and the next-generation internet—a data infrastructure that is both trustworthy and affordable. Returning data sovereignty to ordinary people is an inevitable process. The value of $WAL is anchored in this destined-to-expand future.
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TestnetNomad
· 16h ago
Cut costs to one percent? That number sounds a bit unbelievable, but if it can really be achieved, it would indeed change the game rules.
View OriginalReply0
Degen4Breakfast
· 18h ago
Oh wow, finally someone dares to tell the truth. Those TPS hype guys really need to wake up.
Forget it, forget it, it's just another "revolution" narrative. Let's just watch for now.
The Red Stuff set is indeed impressive. Cutting costs to 1%—anyone would be envious. But actually implementing it in practice is another story.
I love the 60% allocation to the community. At least it's not as blatant as some projects that just suck blood.
The concept of data sovereignty is a bit ambitious. It sounds good, but how many years will it really take to return control to the users?
Wait, we need to look at the code and audit reports before jumping to conclusions. Just hearing stories makes me a bit cautious.
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RealYieldWizard
· 18h ago
Really, I need to check on-chain data to believe the claim that storage costs have been cut to 1% of the original.
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60% to the community, 7% to early investors? That allocation is quite refreshing, but I have to ask how the current liquidity looks.
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Red Stuff encoding sounds good, just curious whether this scheme has undergone large-scale stress testing.
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Once again, infrastructure built for the AI era. This kind of rhetoric has been too common lately, but storage is indeed a necessity.
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The dream of returning data sovereignty to individuals is something I've pursued many times; in the end, it depends on who is willing to truly take responsibility.
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I’d love to try a hundredfold speed increase, but the prerequisite is having enough nodes to support it.
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No hype, no blackening. The high cost of storage is a serious issue that Web3 should address. Let's compare how other projects are solving it.
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WenMoon
· 18h ago
Red stuff this thing really, why didn't anyone hype this before and instead kept promoting those TPS numbers every day
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60% to the community, 7% to VC, I have to admit this ratio design, no pretense
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Cut storage costs to one percent? If that's true, then Web3 will have a chance to survive
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Another pie-in-the-sky plan for the AI era, but this time the infrastructure logic actually makes sense
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Damn, someone finally told the truth, so annoying those project teams that only show off numbers
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I've heard too many times about data sovereignty, why isn't $wal just as doomed as others
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Red stuff coding, I feel like it's just reheating leftovers, has anyone actually used this set of tools?
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Staking dividends mainly depend on the token release curve, otherwise it's just a quick cut and run
View OriginalReply0
FloorSweeper
· 18h ago
Redstuff's encoding system is indeed impressive; can the cost really be cut down to 1%? That might be a bit exaggerated, it still depends on how it performs in practice.
Don’t be fooled by projects that only boast speed numbers. The true revolution is quietly happening at the foundational layer.
Take storage as an example. Web3 has been haunted by two curses: exorbitant costs and painfully slow speeds. Many solutions look flashy but are ultimately ineffective. That is until someone used a coding scheme called Red Stuff to handle this—dispersing your data like scattered puzzle pieces across the globe. The brilliance lies in the fact that even if some fragments are lost, the data can be instantly reconstructed, and the security needs no further explanation.
What’s the most realistic number? Storage costs are directly cut to a fraction of traditional decentralized solutions, sometimes even just 1%, with speeds increased by over ten times. This is not marketing talk; it’s a real solution to the century-old problem of expensive and slow Web3 storage.
Token design is also quite interesting. $WAL is not just fuel for payments; staking it allows you to share in the network’s growth rewards. But here’s the most heartening detail—over 60% of the tokens are directly allocated to the community, with only 7% going to early investors. The logic is clear: it’s not about cutting the leeks, but genuinely aiming for shared prosperity with users.
Thinking bigger, this system is built for the AI era and the next-generation internet—a data infrastructure that is both trustworthy and affordable. Returning data sovereignty to ordinary people is an inevitable process. The value of $WAL is anchored in this destined-to-expand future.