The way the Walrus protocol works is essentially like an electrical power system—you flip a switch, and the light turns on. No need to worry about how power plants balance electricity frequency, no need to concern yourself with how the grid is dispatched; everything happens silently behind the scenes.
This is what on-chain experience should look like. Not a tense Gas fee bidding war, not a long and agonizing block confirmation wait, and certainly no complicated procedures during cross-chain switching. True smoothness should be seamless, natural, and effortless.
One day, when you realize you've been using blockchain applications all day without even noticing you're using blockchain—that moment marks the true victory of blockchain technology. The highest level of user experience is to make people forget the existence of underlying protocols. Walrus is moving in this direction, hiding complexity deep within protocol design, leaving simplicity for every user.
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WhaleWatcher
· 01-10 23:10
Well said, this is exactly what I've been waiting for. The whole Gas fee system is really annoying, and I have to constantly keep an eye on on-chain activity, exhausting.
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APY追逐者
· 01-10 21:15
Well said, this is the future we want. The whole gas fee system should have been eliminated long ago. Competing for prices like playing a daily card game is unsustainable. Walrus's approach is indeed clear-headed, absorbing all the underlying complexity so users can operate effortlessly. That's what true mass adoption looks like.
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PensionDestroyer
· 01-10 10:45
That's so true. The on-chain experience is really a nightmare right now. You have to keep an eye on gas fees and dance around, and crossing chains takes half a day of hassle, which is hardly like using the internet.
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FlatTax
· 01-10 10:29
That's correct, the key is to settle all the underlying issues so that users don't have to worry about them at all. Only then can it be called true product strength.
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StablecoinGuardian
· 01-10 10:25
Exactly, this is the Web3 I want. I'm really tired of struggling with Gas fees all the time.
The way the Walrus protocol works is essentially like an electrical power system—you flip a switch, and the light turns on. No need to worry about how power plants balance electricity frequency, no need to concern yourself with how the grid is dispatched; everything happens silently behind the scenes.
This is what on-chain experience should look like. Not a tense Gas fee bidding war, not a long and agonizing block confirmation wait, and certainly no complicated procedures during cross-chain switching. True smoothness should be seamless, natural, and effortless.
One day, when you realize you've been using blockchain applications all day without even noticing you're using blockchain—that moment marks the true victory of blockchain technology. The highest level of user experience is to make people forget the existence of underlying protocols. Walrus is moving in this direction, hiding complexity deep within protocol design, leaving simplicity for every user.