I recently did some calculations and compared several mainstream storage solutions. When comparing the costs of storing 1TB of data for a year, the difference is huge: traditional cloud services cost $500, Filecoin quotes $200, and the new distributed storage star Walrus is directly cut to $50 — backed by a combination of RedStuff encoding and a 4x replication factor. In terms of read/write experience, Walrus's access latency remains stable around 80ms, which is basically the same as traditional cloud providers. I actually ran a project where I migrated a training dataset from a certain AI team from traditional cloud to a distributed network, saving $4,500 in storage costs in just one year, and the data recovery speed was more than twice as fast. This cost difference is not a small amount; traditional cloud services are indeed struggling to bear this pressure. In the future, whoever can optimize cost, performance, and ease of use will be able to capture a significant market share.
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Chaoshan
· 01-11 17:52
Wal is trash, the price of the coin says everything
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whxing777
· 01-11 08:41
Too many times it has been proven that institutions push up the price and then cash out, but some people are fooled into thinking it will rise. Therefore, anyone still claiming that FIL will go up is either dishonest or a thief.
I recently did some calculations and compared several mainstream storage solutions. When comparing the costs of storing 1TB of data for a year, the difference is huge: traditional cloud services cost $500, Filecoin quotes $200, and the new distributed storage star Walrus is directly cut to $50 — backed by a combination of RedStuff encoding and a 4x replication factor. In terms of read/write experience, Walrus's access latency remains stable around 80ms, which is basically the same as traditional cloud providers. I actually ran a project where I migrated a training dataset from a certain AI team from traditional cloud to a distributed network, saving $4,500 in storage costs in just one year, and the data recovery speed was more than twice as fast. This cost difference is not a small amount; traditional cloud services are indeed struggling to bear this pressure. In the future, whoever can optimize cost, performance, and ease of use will be able to capture a significant market share.