#数字资产市场洞察 The evolution of Ethereum is quite interesting – it has gradually shifted from refining the underlying infrastructure to breakthroughs in the Application Layer and user experience. This is not just a technical iteration, but rather a clear commitment to development. While adhering to the principles of Decentralization, whether it can truly leverage large-scale applications is the key point.
Currently, the performance of $ETH around 8500 reflects, to some extent, the market's expectations for this stage of transition. In contrast, the activity of meme ecosystems like $DOGE and $SHIB should not be overlooked. Although they start from different points, they are both exploring their respective application spaces.
How long do you think this transition period will last? Can Ethereum truly lower the usage threshold for ordinary users while maintaining its technological advantages? Feel free to share your thoughts.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 10h ago
To be honest, whether ETH can make this transition really depends on execution; mere promises are useless.
The threshold issue is really not small; the cost and complexity for ordinary people are still present.
Coins like DOGE are actually doing quite well, which is ironic, isn't it?
The big cycle depends on the overall market conditions in the crypto world; simply relying on ETH's technological iteration might not be enough.
The price level of 8500 is indeed a bit awkward; it can't rise and it hasn't been pushed down either.
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SmartContractPlumber
· 10h ago
Change cycle? To be honest, it depends on whether the permission control of the Contract Layer can really be done well. I have seen too many projects loudly calling for a drop in thresholds, only to find numerous vulnerabilities during deployment, with old issues like integer overflow and reentrancy reoccurring.
The infrastructure of ETH is fine, but once the Application Layer involves the flow of funds, it must undergo strict auditing—otherwise, no matter how good the user experience is, it’s all for nothing; a single exploit can lead to complete loss. The balance between Decentralization and usability, in simple terms, tests whether the security awareness of the developers has kept pace.
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RektButAlive
· 10h ago
The price level of 8500 is really a bit awkward. What happened to the promised breakthrough?
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If Ethereum wants to drive large-scale applications, it should figure out the gas fees first.
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I feel like we have to wait until the next Bear Market to see the real deal in this cycle; right now, it's all just speculative hype.
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Is the activity of doge and shib high? Isn't that just the community hyping themselves up? What about real applications?
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Lowering the threshold? I think it's getting higher and higher; ordinary people can't afford to play.
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Transition cycle? At least three years or maybe indefinitely, haha.
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This sounds like last year's rhetoric. Technical upgrades ≠ user growth; don't get it mixed up.
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BtcDailyResearcher
· 10h ago
To be honest, I am optimistic about ETH's shift from infrastructure to the Application Layer, but the question is, when will the user threshold really be lowered?
It’s still too competitive now, and the learning cost for ordinary people is still too high.
On the other hand, meme coins are extremely active, isn't that ironic?
The price level of 8500 is just a gamble, and nothing can be seen in the short term.
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FlashLoanLord
· 10h ago
To be honest, maintaining decentralization while lowering the usage threshold is much harder than it seems.
On the aspect of lowering the threshold, Ethereum has been talking about it for so long with little progress; wallet connections, gas fees, contract interactions... ordinary people find it overwhelming.
On the other hand, the memes have truly thought through the user experience, which is the real irony.
How long can the price level of 8500 be maintained? It still depends on whether real applications can keep up; just having technical promises is far from enough.
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wrekt_but_learning
· 10h ago
To be honest, Ethereum's "technical advantages + user experience" dual-drive sounds good, but it's hard to say how far it can really go.
If ETH really wants to be used by everyone, it needs to simplify that pile of complex Wallets, gas fees, and contract interactions thoroughly, otherwise no matter how strong the infrastructure is, it would be useless.
On the other hand, the DOGE players are indeed resilient. Although they started off as a joke, they are full of vitality and sometimes gain recognition more easily than those "serious" projects.
#数字资产市场洞察 The evolution of Ethereum is quite interesting – it has gradually shifted from refining the underlying infrastructure to breakthroughs in the Application Layer and user experience. This is not just a technical iteration, but rather a clear commitment to development. While adhering to the principles of Decentralization, whether it can truly leverage large-scale applications is the key point.
Currently, the performance of $ETH around 8500 reflects, to some extent, the market's expectations for this stage of transition. In contrast, the activity of meme ecosystems like $DOGE and $SHIB should not be overlooked. Although they start from different points, they are both exploring their respective application spaces.
How long do you think this transition period will last? Can Ethereum truly lower the usage threshold for ordinary users while maintaining its technological advantages? Feel free to share your thoughts.