On the weekend, I helped my cousin debug the backend of his e-commerce store. The prompt "data synchronization timeout on the chain" left him scratching his head: "When there are too many orders during promotions, it gets stuck. Customers pay but can't see the logistics, and my phone is about to explode with complaints." He sighed, "Public chains are either congested or have high fees; small businesses can't bear that."

This reminded me of Bitlayer's "layered auxiliary road" logic—where the main chain guards the security and asset rights on the "main road," it builds a processing layer alongside to handle orders, logistics, and other "daily commuting" needs. The dozens of orders per second being synchronized in my cousin's store flow smoothly here like bicycles on a dedicated lane. #Bitlayer

It uses a "fraud proof" mechanism that doesn't require each piece of data to queue back to the main chain, yet is as reliable as the main chain, and the fees are reduced to one-tenth of the original. My cousin's eyes lit up after hearing this: "Isn't this just tailor-made for small businesses?"

Today's blockchain should shift from concepts back to practicality. Just like e-commerce exploded after solving "payment security," technology must bend down to solve the problems of ordinary people to reveal its true value. Before leaving, my cousin handed me some local specialties and said he understood the access method, so he wouldn't fear order "traffic jams" during the next promotion. Only technology that can ease the worries of ordinary people will go far. @BitlayerLabs