I want to look at the Walrus project from a different perspective. In the previous two articles, I analyzed the sources of its popularity and market pressure, but recently there's a more practical and less exciting question that keeps circling in my mind—if I were not in the crypto world at all, but a company that genuinely needs storage services, would I choose it?
A common scenario often appears in my mind: I am the technical lead of a content platform, or a small team working on AI data processing. The daily requirements are simple: data needs to come in, be stored properly, accessible at any time, and the costs must be within control. Honestly, I don’t care how grand your claims are; I only care about two things—system stability and clear accounting.
Once I think this way, all the "buzz" around Walrus automatically gets filtered out. What remains are the most difficult and critical parts—can it truly turn storage from a concept into a usable service?
To be honest, I have a bit of bias against the storage track. Many projects look dazzling on the surface, but when it comes to actual use, they turn out to be disappointing. The reason is straightforward: storage isn’t like social media or trading, nor is it something that can attract users just by hosting an event. It’s infrastructure, and its growth logic is like laying water pipes—first, lay the pipelines, then connect the faucets, and finally, people will start complaining about water pressure.
So when I look at Walrus, I deliberately avoid the "seems exciting" information and instead focus on the "no one pays attention to but determines success or failure" details. During this process, I discovered a very critical point: Walrus has been emphasizing the concept of "programmable storage" from the very beginning. This is not just hype; it reflects their intention to turn storage into a truly usable foundational layer.
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NewPumpamentals
· 01-11 22:23
In plain terms, the storage track is about real skills and tangible results, unlike those conceptual coins that can float up based on stories.
Only through hard work can the true strength be revealed. Let's see who is willing to honestly lay the foundation now.
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0xSherlock
· 01-11 13:27
Really? At the end of the day, storage is all about who can build solid infrastructure, not just talk.
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NFT_Therapy_Group
· 01-10 03:00
The analogy of laying water pipes is brilliant, but the real question is how many companies are willing to wait for this pipeline to be completed.
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AirdropAutomaton
· 01-09 13:20
The analogy of laying pipes is brilliant, much more clear-headed than those projects that keep rambling about the future of blockchain.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 01-09 00:54
To put it simply, what I fear most are those storage projects that are all talk and no action. They sound good in theory but are full of pitfalls in practice. Is Walrus taking this seriously this time?
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 01-09 00:54
I just want to ask a heartbreaking question: Can Walrus actually be used now? Or is it another storage project that looks sexy but is disconnected from the chain?
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PoolJumper
· 01-09 00:49
That's right, storage projects should be viewed this way. Those big promises are all虚的; whether they can truly solve user pain points is the real key.
But to be fair, the concept of "programmable storage" still sounds a bit lofty. It depends on their actual deployment progress—are there really enterprise-level clients using it?
The analogy of laying water pipes is excellent, but the problem is that most storage projects lay half the pipes and then go silent.
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GraphGuru
· 01-09 00:46
Hmm... The analogy of laying pipes really hit home for me. Many storage projects are just concept traders; only those that are truly usable are the real deal.
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PositionPhobia
· 01-09 00:39
That really hits home. The superficial stuff in the crypto projects should indeed be filtered out, as long as it can be genuinely useful.
The storage track is indeed a trap, hyped up every day, but full of problems when used.
As for programmable storage... but it still seems that the final real-world data is what truly counts.
I want to look at the Walrus project from a different perspective. In the previous two articles, I analyzed the sources of its popularity and market pressure, but recently there's a more practical and less exciting question that keeps circling in my mind—if I were not in the crypto world at all, but a company that genuinely needs storage services, would I choose it?
A common scenario often appears in my mind: I am the technical lead of a content platform, or a small team working on AI data processing. The daily requirements are simple: data needs to come in, be stored properly, accessible at any time, and the costs must be within control. Honestly, I don’t care how grand your claims are; I only care about two things—system stability and clear accounting.
Once I think this way, all the "buzz" around Walrus automatically gets filtered out. What remains are the most difficult and critical parts—can it truly turn storage from a concept into a usable service?
To be honest, I have a bit of bias against the storage track. Many projects look dazzling on the surface, but when it comes to actual use, they turn out to be disappointing. The reason is straightforward: storage isn’t like social media or trading, nor is it something that can attract users just by hosting an event. It’s infrastructure, and its growth logic is like laying water pipes—first, lay the pipelines, then connect the faucets, and finally, people will start complaining about water pressure.
So when I look at Walrus, I deliberately avoid the "seems exciting" information and instead focus on the "no one pays attention to but determines success or failure" details. During this process, I discovered a very critical point: Walrus has been emphasizing the concept of "programmable storage" from the very beginning. This is not just hype; it reflects their intention to turn storage into a truly usable foundational layer.