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Looking at the full picture of this crypto ecosystem, there's an ongoing contradiction that can't be resolved. On one side, there's the massive Bitcoin asset pool with liquidity that feels more like dead water; on the other, the public chains claiming to revolutionize payments—yet? They are still heavily constrained by throughput and transaction fees. The missing piece in the ecosystem puzzle is this gap.
From a performance perspective. Many people fall asleep reading TPS numbers in whitepapers, but few projects can actually run at high speeds. Some new public chains using innovative consensus mechanisms have tested over 1000+ TPS in real-world conditions—these are not just on paper—meaning they can handle real-time settlement at a global scale. Imagine the old days, paying with your phone at a café and waiting for block confirmation—such an experience felt like the last century. If response times are reduced to milliseconds, the psychological barrier for Web2 users to transition into Web3 drops significantly.
But speed is just the foundation; the real key lies ahead. The true game-changer is that these new payment protocols are beginning to activate Bitcoin's liquidity. When you can revive dormant assets and enable them to circulate within efficient settlement networks, the entire ecosystem's potential opens up. This is what a payment public chain truly needs to do—not just patch up the existing framework, but fundamentally reshape the rules from the ground up.
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Hearing about 1000+ TPS sounds great, but what about when it’s actually implemented? Still no real application scenarios visible.
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Revitalizing dormant assets—there's nothing wrong with that idea, but the problem is, who will act as the intermediary, and how will the risks be shared?
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Basically, it's about wanting to have both fish and bear paws—fast speed, low fees, and guaranteed security. Is it really that easy to achieve all of that?
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Milliseconds-level response? If it were truly possible, Web2 users would have migrated long ago, no need to wait until now.
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Reshaping the underlying rules sounds impressive, but haven't all those new public chains ended up with the same outcome in the end?
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I agree with activating liquidity. If we can truly wake up Bitcoin's dormant assets, it will indeed change the current situation.
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The liquidity of Bitcoin, which is like dead water, is actually because everyone wants to hodl, and changing the protocol can't change people's minds.
Wait, isn't this just another storytelling cycle? Why do I still experience frequent lag with millisecond confirmations?
Reshaping rules from the ground up? I've heard that too many times, and yet it's still been messed up by exchanges and whales.
Throughput isn't the problem; the issue is poor user experience. What's the use of high TPS if the experience is bad?
Alright, here we go again, another call to activate dormant assets. I've heard this fifty times already this year.
The example of paying at a café is a bit cliché... but indeed, that's the key to adoption.
The metaphor of liquidity as a stagnant water really hits the nerve—something really needs to be done to revitalize BTC.
Speaking of 1000+ TPS sounding great, but the reality of running it is another story. Let's wait and see.
Rebuilding from the ground up? Sounds grand, but how many can actually pull it off?
I just want to know, once liquidity is truly activated, will new tricks emerge again?
Damn, it still depends on who can make payments truly smooth; otherwise, it's just another PPT revolution.
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1000+ TPS sounds great, but once it hits the mainnet, transaction fees skyrocket, hilarious.
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Basically, it's Bitcoin sitting idle, new public chains nobody uses, just middlemen making a profit in the middle, right?
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Milliseconds-level response time is enough, I just want to know which project can truly settle instantly, no more PPT revolutions.
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It feels like taking the contradictions leftover in the crypto world and forcing them onto the Web3 ecosystem. It looks grand but actually solves nothing.
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Reshaping rules from the ground up, I've heard this for three years, but we're still stuck in the same place. I only believe in you if I see real progress.