Many people are watching the K-line of SOL for ups and downs, but have not understood a key point: The value of blockchain always follows 'how much real demand it can support.' SOL can rise because the applications in its ecosystem dare to 'invest heavily' — Meme coins can change hands dozens of times a day, and DeFi protocols need to process hundreds of millions of dollars in real-time clearing. These scenarios demand speeds that have long exceeded the limits of ordinary public chains.
The power of Solayer lies in its 'counterintuitive' way of solving this problem. While others pile on Layer 2 to alleviate pressure, it focuses on 'hardware acceleration': bringing over InfiniBand RDMA technology from the supercomputing field, enhancing communication speed between nodes by 10 times, and reducing latency to the microsecond level (1 microsecond = one millionth of a second); on the software side, it reconstructs the SVM, breaking down transactions into independent tasks, such as delegating signatures to dedicated chips, calculations to GPUs, and storage to distributed hard drives — just like an assembly line in a factory, where each step only does what it is best at, leading to a natural surge in efficiency.
This approach allowed it to rapidly evolve from a 're-staking protocol': initially attracting 270,000 users by allowing SOL to provide 'two returns on one asset,' locking up $350 million; now it has become Solana's 'high-performance engine,' even Binance has joined in promoting it, distributing 1.6 million $LAYER daily to attract users to stake BNSOL.