Fren, the ZK track has become popular again recently, but I wonder if you feel the same – many projects sound impressive, but there are hardly any that have actually landed.
"The concept is rich, but the proof generation is thin." Slow speed and high costs are bottlenecks that hinder the progress of the entire ZK ecosystem.
It wasn't until I seriously studied @cysic_xyz that I realized they are not following the empty talk route, but are genuinely a "infrastructure faction."
Their strategy is very hardcore: self-developed ASIC chips. They are directly working from the hardware level, aiming to compress the time for generating ZK proofs from several hours to seconds.
What concept? It's like others are still optimizing horse-drawn carriages, while they are already focused on developing engines.
What's more critical is that what they are creating is not a centralized computing power pool, but a decentralized computing power network. Your idle GPUs and servers can connect to this system and turn into computing power assets that generate revenue — they call it "ComputeFi."
In simple terms, what Cysic wants to do is become the "power plant" of the ZK world. When all future ZK applications require fast and low-cost proofs, the value of this power plant is self-evident.
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Fren, the ZK track has become popular again recently, but I wonder if you feel the same – many projects sound impressive, but there are hardly any that have actually landed.
"The concept is rich, but the proof generation is thin." Slow speed and high costs are bottlenecks that hinder the progress of the entire ZK ecosystem.
It wasn't until I seriously studied @cysic_xyz that I realized they are not following the empty talk route, but are genuinely a "infrastructure faction."
Their strategy is very hardcore: self-developed ASIC chips. They are directly working from the hardware level, aiming to compress the time for generating ZK proofs from several hours to seconds.
What concept? It's like others are still optimizing horse-drawn carriages, while they are already focused on developing engines.
What's more critical is that what they are creating is not a centralized computing power pool, but a decentralized computing power network. Your idle GPUs and servers can connect to this system and turn into computing power assets that generate revenue — they call it "ComputeFi."
In simple terms, what Cysic wants to do is become the "power plant" of the ZK world. When all future ZK applications require fast and low-cost proofs, the value of this power plant is self-evident.