Web3 finance often focuses on "competing concepts and parameters" in the commercial track, but rarely addresses livelihood demands like "the lack of traceability for restoration materials in ancient book restoration" and "the lack of safety regulation in kite production"—community ancient book restoration shops worry about slow settlement for imported restoration paper and ink, while children's kite workshops are concerned about material safety and data gaps in flight, making it difficult for enthusiasts and parents to manage multiple consumption scenarios. Solayer takes a different approach, using hardware-level InfiniSVM as a "scene connector" to deeply root compliant RWA (sUSD) and everyday payment tools (Emerald Card) in two major scenarios, ensuring both the security of ancient book restoration and the fun of parent-child kite activities, opening new paths for Web3 to serve livelihoods.
1. InfiniSVM: giving ancient book restoration "material identification cards" and equipping kite workshops with "safety brains".
1. Community ancient book restoration shop: trace restoration materials in 1 second, allowing old classics to be "restored with confidence".
The core pain point of the community ancient book restoration shop is that "the source of imported restoration materials is difficult to trace and the restoration process is difficult to preserve"—a certain restoration shop processes more than 25 ancient books (stitched books, calligraphy, and paintings) monthly, relying on verbal promises from suppliers for material purity, resulting in a 26% rate of paper brittleness due to poor quality Xuan paper after restoration; restoration steps (page lifting, paper patching, mounting) rely solely on handwritten notes, making subsequent maintenance difficult to trace, and ancient book owners are skeptical about the quality of restoration.
With 1 million TPS and 0.01 microsecond latency, InfiniSVM builds a "dedicated module for ancient book restoration": connecting sensors from material production bases and restoration process recorders, completing more than 19,500 data points (Xuan paper fiber testing, ink composition reports, restoration step video hashes) on-chain within 1 second, generating a "blockchain restoration code" for each ancient book, allowing owners to scan to check material compliance proofs, craftsman's qualifications, and the complete restoration process.
After a certain restoration shop integrated the system, the brittleness rate of ancient books dropped from 26% to 0%, satisfaction with "restoration transparency" rose from 27% to 99%, the number of restoration orders increased by 205% within three months, and it was recommended by the local cultural relics bureau as a "demonstration point for folk ancient book restoration."
2. Children's Kite Workshop: materials + flight data linked on-chain, ensuring parent-child kite activities are "safe to fly".
Parents' concerns about children's kite workshops center around "unsafe kite materials and difficulty in recording flight data"—a certain kite workshop sees more than 40 children making kites daily (paper kites, triangular kites), relying on visual inspection of traditional materials for toxic glue, with a complaint rate of 19%; kite flight height and duration are only estimated manually, making it hard for parents to preserve memories of their children's creations after a kite "flies once and is forgotten."
InfiniSVM's "Children's Kite Safety Module" directly connects material testing instruments and flight positioning devices: synchronizing more than 20,000 data points (environmental certification of glue, strength of kite frames, flight trajectories) within 1 second, automatically alerting when materials exceed standards, generating a "blockchain flight certificate" for each flight, allowing parents to view videos of their child's creation, flight trajectory maps, and download flight photos as keepsakes through the app.
After integration, the kite workshop's complaint rate about odors dropped from 19% to 0%, and parents' satisfaction with "creation retention" reached 98%, with quarterly enrollment increasing by 215%, and many parents specifically bring their children to "make kites that can record flights."
2. sUSD: solving the "cross-border settlement dilemma" in two major scenarios, providing dual guarantees for timeliness and compliance.
1. Ancient book restoration shop: funds for imported materials arrive in 0.04 seconds, saying goodbye to "waiting for materials to delay restoration."
Community restoration shops often encounter "slow settlement and compliance issues" when purchasing Japanese washi paper and Korean pine soot ink—single purchase amounts range from $600 to $8,000, with traditional bank settlements taking 1-3 days, causing delays that lead to missing the restoration window for ancient books; some high-end materials require certification from international cultural preservation associations, and the paper review takes 10 days, adding an additional 18% cost.
sUSD, as a 100% compliant asset anchored to U.S. Treasury bonds and held by Bank of New York Mellon, has been filed with the International Ancient Book Restoration Association: restoration shops use sUSD for payments, receiving funds in 0.04 seconds without exchange rate losses, with on-chain transaction records serving as direct certification evidence, reducing review time from 10 days to 30 minutes.
A certain restoration shop once missed the precious restoration period for ancient books due to delayed settlement with 20% of the washi paper, incurring a loss of $18,000; after integrating sUSD, quarterly procurement costs were reduced by $300,000, and material arrival efficiency improved by 550%, becoming the "cross-border procurement benchmark" for regional ancient book restoration shops.
2. Children's Kite Workshop: Import materials are settled in 1.2 seconds, creating "no shortage of high-quality raw materials".
When the kite workshop procures lightweight kite fabric from Germany and environmentally friendly glue from Japan, it faces "small value high frequency settlement rejection"—single purchases range from $150 to $2,800, with a rejection rate of 43% from banks due to the "niche nature of the children's kite industry"; exchange rate fluctuations lead to monthly material cost variations of 14%, impacting course pricing stability.
sUSD, through dual filings with the International Children's Handicraft Materials Association and financial regulators, has launched the "Kite Materials Rapid Settlement Plan": the workshop pays with sUSD, arriving in 1.2 seconds, synchronizing material environmental certifications on-chain, allowing parents to check material testing records. After a certain kite workshop integrated this, the material procurement rejection rate dropped from 43% to 0, with cost fluctuations controlled within 3.2%, and the material update cycle reduced from 22 days to 4 days.
3. Emerald Card: a card managing "ancient book restoration + children's kites", with benefits that can be enjoyed "in both directions".
The core concern for ancient book enthusiasts and parents is that "sending ancient books for restoration and reporting kite classes requires switching between multiple apps, and discounts cannot be fully utilized." The Emerald Card relies on InfiniSVM's second-level confirmation to create a "universal card for livelihood scenarios":
• Unified payment + data on the go: bind more than 100 platforms including ancient book restoration shops, kite workshops, and stationery stores, allowing direct deductions for sending ancient books for restoration and paying for kite class fees; the app automatically stores ancient book restoration codes and kite flight reports, so owners no longer need to carry paper restoration orders, and parents can check safety reminders for materials used by their children at any time.
• Cross-industry "mutual nourishment": pay for restoration of ancient books, get a parent-child experience class at the kite workshop; pay for kite class fees and receive discount coupons for stationery from the ancient book restoration shop. Mr. Wang from Yangzhou sent his family heirloom stitched book for restoration and used the rewarded experience class to help his child make their first kite, "protecting old items while having fun with the child, it's so thoughtful."
• Cultural preservation + parent-child design: for ancient book enthusiasts, add a "restoration progress reminder" and push knowledge on ancient book maintenance; for parents, enable a "kite flying live broadcast feature" to watch their child flying kites in real-time, and set a "kite class expenditure limit" to avoid accidental operations.
Data shows that among Emerald Card users, 99% use both ancient book restoration and kite services, with an average monthly consumption frequency of 15 times, far exceeding the industry average of 12.2 times, and 93% of users say, "I no longer have to remember multiple platform accounts and passwords."
Conclusion: Web3 doesn't need to be "high-end"; serving small livelihood matters is the true value.
Solayer's innovation is not just in the impressive performance parameters of InfiniSVM, but in applying technology to the livelihood scenarios close to life, such as "the traceability of ancient book restoration" and "children's kite flight records"—making ancient book restoration more reliable, making parent-child kite activities more enjoyable, and allowing ordinary people to easily enjoy the conveniences brought by Web3.
Now, Solayer has achieved $1.43 billion TVL and 520,000 monthly active users, 96% of which come from ancient book restoration and children's kite-related livelihood scenarios. As InfiniSVM continues to spread, Web3 will no longer be a "niche concept", but a truly accessible "livelihood tool".