Have you ever wondered why distributed storage has always remained in the realm of high-end users? Walrus recently provided an answer—they have developed a storage solution specifically for lightweight terminals like smartphones and IoT devices.
From a technical perspective, it's very interesting: by optimizing sharding algorithms and compressing metadata, these devices can connect to the network without requiring high-end configurations. Even more impressive is the "on-demand sharding" logic—terminals only sync necessary metadata, and when data is needed, they fetch the corresponding shards in real-time for reassembly. This significantly reduces storage and network pressure.
Several Web3 applications are already using this approach. File backups for mobile wallets, real-time data for IoT, lightweight DApps' image and video hosting—these scenarios are all covered, and distributed storage is truly starting to "penetrate".
The WAL token design is also very practical: ordinary users only need to stake a small amount of tokens to contribute their idle space on phones or devices, earning rewards proportional to their contribution—essentially monetizing unused hard drives. When applications connect, staking WAL can provide discounts, reducing initial costs. Additionally, operations like data verification and permission adjustments require WAL to execute on-chain contracts, ensuring security and making the entire economic model self-consistent. With this, the "全民参与" (全民参与) distributed storage with mass participation truly has a chance to become a reality.
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AirdropFatigue
· 4h ago
Hey, no, Walrus really came up with a good idea this time. I've been waiting for the opportunity to monetize phone storage.
Can an unused hard drive really make money? Let's see how much we can earn first.
The on-demand sharding optimization idea is really impressive; no wonder it can be applied to IoT devices.
Staking costs are so low? I need to check if my wallet can earn back the costs. Airdrop enthusiasts, pay attention.
The penetration is really fast; it feels like distributed storage is finally entering everyday life.
But I'm worried it might be another pattern of initial hype followed by zero returns, so I need to stay calm.
I believe in the self-consistent economic model of WAL, but what really matters is how much participants can earn.
Turning phones into nodes sounds fresh, but will it actually work smoothly in practice?
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LiquidationOracle
· 6h ago
Turning old hard drives into cash? Now it's finally our turn, ordinary people. Previously, distributed storage was indeed too high and out of reach.
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DeFi_Dad_Jokes
· 01-14 04:59
Alright, finally someone remembers the pile of idle space in our phones. Isn't it nice to earn some pocket money?
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ETH_Maxi_Taxi
· 01-12 20:52
This truly democratizes distributed storage; previously, only big players could afford it.
Can you make money from dusted hard drives? The small amount of space on my phone can also contribute, feels like a good idea.
On-demand shard retrieval saves bandwidth, mobile users finally don't have to worry anymore.
The token design of WAL is quite interesting; staking can earn rewards, this is the way Web3 should be.
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GasFeeGazer
· 01-12 20:52
Hmm, finally someone has perfected the concept of idle space. Turning the unused storage on your phone into money—I'm loving this logic.
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GigaBrainAnon
· 01-12 20:49
Can dust-covered hard drives make money? Now even phones have a use, and the gameplay is indeed quite interesting.
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SatoshiSherpa
· 01-12 20:36
Turning unused hard drives into cash—this idea is indeed brilliant, but can it really hold up?
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Honestly, the logic of on-demand sharding is well thought out. The problem is, will ordinary people really stake WAL?
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Diving into IoT is a breakthrough; finally, someone has thought of this angle.
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It's both a self-consistent economic model and a全民参与... Let's see if it can survive until next year.
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Mobile wallet backup + idle space monetization—combining these two actually has some potential.
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So the key is still WAL's liquidity and price stability. How is this being handled?
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Finally, someone remembered mobile users in distributed storage. Has anyone else thought of this track?
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Hard drive monetization sounds great, but the premise is that someone is really willing to pay for your service.
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I've seen too many on-chain verification designs that consume tokens; in the end, they all turn into a fee hell.
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Lightweight DApp hosting videos—who bears the bandwidth costs? This part wasn't explained clearly.
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BasementAlchemist
· 01-12 20:28
Can dust-covered hard drives really be converted into cash? I have to try, but it depends on how much WAL coins can rise.
Have you ever wondered why distributed storage has always remained in the realm of high-end users? Walrus recently provided an answer—they have developed a storage solution specifically for lightweight terminals like smartphones and IoT devices.
From a technical perspective, it's very interesting: by optimizing sharding algorithms and compressing metadata, these devices can connect to the network without requiring high-end configurations. Even more impressive is the "on-demand sharding" logic—terminals only sync necessary metadata, and when data is needed, they fetch the corresponding shards in real-time for reassembly. This significantly reduces storage and network pressure.
Several Web3 applications are already using this approach. File backups for mobile wallets, real-time data for IoT, lightweight DApps' image and video hosting—these scenarios are all covered, and distributed storage is truly starting to "penetrate".
The WAL token design is also very practical: ordinary users only need to stake a small amount of tokens to contribute their idle space on phones or devices, earning rewards proportional to their contribution—essentially monetizing unused hard drives. When applications connect, staking WAL can provide discounts, reducing initial costs. Additionally, operations like data verification and permission adjustments require WAL to execute on-chain contracts, ensuring security and making the entire economic model self-consistent. With this, the "全民参与" (全民参与) distributed storage with mass participation truly has a chance to become a reality.