0xMiden's cross-chain solution is like opening a "Cross-Chain Restaurant," offering multiple dining options for your asset transfers:
**Express Channel** benchmarks fast-food mode—prioritize paying the acceleration fee, assets start immediately, and reach the destination chain at the fastest speed. Suitable for traders who don't mind spending more and pursue efficiency.
**Economical Channel** uses a pooling logic—wait for more assets to gather into a batch, transfer collectively to reduce per-transaction costs. Although slightly slower, the fees are cheaper, making it a cost-effective choice.
Currently, these two bridges are operational, and more innovative cross-chain solutions are in development, providing users with more options in the future. The ways to transfer cross-chain assets are continuously evolving.
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DegenWhisperer
· 12-20 09:24
Express Channel? LOL, you want me to spend more money again. I've seen this trick many times on exchanges.
I like the shared order for the Economic Channel, but you have to wait, which is a bit annoying.
That analogy is quite vivid, but the real test is still security. Cross-chain bridge failures are not uncommon.
Let's wait for more solutions to go live. Currently, there are still too few options.
I just want to ask, how much exactly is the acceleration fee for the Express Channel? That's the key.
The shared order mode sounds like bargaining at the market—has that vibe.
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MentalWealthHarvester
· 12-19 13:57
Tsk, it's that restaurant analogy again. Feels like I've heard it several times, but the logic of splitting bills to reduce fees is indeed interesting.
Everyone wants to pay less, but who really wants to wait? The key still depends on actual slippage and time costs; saving on fees on paper is useless.
Are two main channels enough for now? What about other chains? Has the ecosystem fragmentation problem been solved?
0xMiden's cross-chain solution is like opening a "Cross-Chain Restaurant," offering multiple dining options for your asset transfers:
**Express Channel** benchmarks fast-food mode—prioritize paying the acceleration fee, assets start immediately, and reach the destination chain at the fastest speed. Suitable for traders who don't mind spending more and pursue efficiency.
**Economical Channel** uses a pooling logic—wait for more assets to gather into a batch, transfer collectively to reduce per-transaction costs. Although slightly slower, the fees are cheaper, making it a cost-effective choice.
Currently, these two bridges are operational, and more innovative cross-chain solutions are in development, providing users with more options in the future. The ways to transfer cross-chain assets are continuously evolving.