Recently, a storage solution developed by Mysten Labs has attracted a lot of attention. To be honest, it indeed solves a long-standing pain point for on-chain applications.



In the past, handling 4K videos or large-scale datasets on the blockchain was limited by the technical stack. But this Red Stuff-based solution takes a different approach—using XOR operations to cut files into multiple fragments, then distributing them to nodes around the world. The interesting part of this design is its fault-tolerance mechanism: even if two-thirds of the nodes in the network go offline or crash, the remaining nodes still have the fragments needed to accurately reconstruct the complete data. This redundancy design keeps costs relatively low.

More importantly, it redefines the storage logic for large objects on the blockchain. Previously, storage was just storage, with little interaction with smart contracts. Now, through deep integration with Sui, data assets become first-class objects that contracts can directly manipulate, opening up new possibilities for application developers.

In scenarios like AI inference, complex gaming, and rich media content—where high data throughput is required—such infrastructure is the key support for scalable Web3 applications. Instead of chasing projects without technical depth, it’s more rational to focus on those that have truly built long-term technological moat.
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GasFeeWhisperervip
· 01-22 18:22
The red stuff actually has some substance, much more reliable than those projects that boast every day.
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quietly_stakingvip
· 01-22 16:04
Mysten Labs really put some thought into this time, not just the usual pump-and-dump tactics.

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XOR sharding + fault tolerance combo truly hits the mark; finally, someone is seriously building infrastructure.

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Basically, someone has finally solved the difficult problem of storage in a decent way. Not easy.

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Using the term "moat" appropriately—compared to a bunch of air tokens, this is truly worth following.

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The shift to data as a first-class object is actually quite crucial; contracts can now directly manipulate data, opening up new possibilities.

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Can it recover when two-thirds of the nodes are down? This redundancy design is really impressive, keeping costs so low—there's something to it.

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Once again, Sui ecosystem—this public chain is seriously laying down infrastructure.

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Media are all hyping up altcoins, but no one really talks about these core technologies; you have to find the information yourself.

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AI inference combined with this setup feels like certain scenarios could really take off in the future, not just PPT projects.
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SignatureAnxietyvip
· 01-19 18:59
Really, Mysten Labs' move is serious; finally, someone has got storage right.
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AmateurDAOWatchervip
· 01-19 18:59
Really, storage has always been a bottleneck issue. This time, Mysten's solution seems to really have some real skills.
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CryptoPunstervip
· 01-19 18:41
Haha, finally someone explained data storage clearly. I used to think storing 4K videos on-chain was just a dream.

Honestly, I need to think more about the XOR operation sharding logic, but the design that can recover even if two-thirds of the nodes go offline is indeed impressive.

Instead of shouting every day that certain coins will skyrocket, it's better to look more at these truly moat-worthy infrastructure projects. Unfortunately, most people are still sleepwalking.

The fact that data has become a first-class object might be the real game-changer, but it will only count once application developers actually start using it.

Mysten Labs did a pretty good job this time; at least it's more reliable than those PPT projects. Let's wait and see what happens next with a smile.
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NervousFingersvip
· 01-19 18:39
Wait, two-thirds of the nodes go offline and can still recover? How much redundancy does that require? Can the costs really be brought down?
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zkNoobvip
· 01-19 18:35
Someone finally figured out how to handle storage, but whether Sui can truly become popular still depends on what happens next.
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