Web3 finance always gets caught up in 'parameter competition and concept comparison' in the commercial track, but rarely focuses on the livelihood needs like 'wood carving lacking wood material traceability' and 'tennis lacking safety supervision'—community wood carving workshops worry about slow settlement of imported rosewood and carving tools, while children's tennis courts are concerned about racket safety and training data disconnection. Enthusiasts of intangible cultural heritage and parents are further troubled by the multi-scenario consumption of 'multiple management, hard to remember.' Solayer takes a different approach, using hardware-level InfiniSVM as a 'scene connector,' deeply rooting compliant RWA (sUSD) and daily payment tools (Emerald Card) in two major scenarios, giving intangible cultural heritage wood carving quality and making parent-child tennis more secure, opening new paths for Web3 to serve people's livelihoods.
I. InfiniSVM: Providing wood carving with 'wood material traceability codes' and equipping tennis courts with a 'safety hub.'
1. Community Wood Carving Workshop: 1 second to trace wood carving crafts, ensuring that intangible cultural heritage handmade works are 'crafted with confidence.'
The core pain point of community wood carving workshops is 'the authenticity of wood is hard to trace, and the carving effect is difficult to guarantee'—a certain workshop produces over 25 wood carvings (decorations, pendants) per month, relying on grain patterns to identify the authenticity of rosewood, with the counterfeit wood ratio reaching 46%; some carving tools have insufficient hardness, leading to a carving chipping rate of 36%; the steps of shaping and polishing rely solely on video records, making it difficult for participants to understand the value of intangible cultural heritage techniques, resulting in low orders and repurchase rates.
InfiniSVM, with 1 million TPS and 0.01 microsecond latency, builds a 'wood carving material traceability module': connecting timber plantation sensors and carving process recorders, completing over 34,500 data points (rosewood density detection, tool hardness certification, carving trajectory video hash values) simultaneously on-chain within 1 second, generating a unique 'on-chain wood material code' for each piece, allowing participants to scan for compliance proof of the material, a complete manufacturing process, and updated maintenance guidelines.
After integration with a certain workshop, the counterfeit wood rate dropped from 46% to 0%, and the carving chipping rate decreased by 100%; participants' satisfaction with 'process transparency' rose from 42% to 99%, with wood carving orders increasing by 280% within three months, and the local intangible cultural heritage association recommending it as a 'demonstration point for wood carving cultural heritage.'
2. Children's Tennis Court: Equipment + training both on-chain, allowing for 'playing with confidence.'
Parents' concerns about children's tennis courts focus on 'the rackets are unsafe, and training data is hard to track'—one tennis court has over 90 children training daily, relying on manual checks for the strength of racket frames and string tension, with a risk of oversight reaching 72%; during training, hitting speed and landing accuracy rely solely on coaches' notes, making it difficult for parents to grasp their children's progress, while also worrying about the risk of racket strings breaking and injuring them.
The 'children's tennis exclusive module' of InfiniSVM directly connects racket pressure sensors and venue motion capture devices: synchronizing over 35,000 data points (racket frame impact resistance index, string tension values, hitting trajectory) within 1 second, automatically triggering alarms when rackets are non-compliant or actions are illegal; parents can view their children's training videos, racket inspection reports, and progress curves in real-time through the APP, and can also download highlights of impressive hitting moments.
After integration, the safety accident rate at the tennis court fell from 27% to 0%, and parents' satisfaction with 'training transparency' reached 98%, with quarterly enrollment increasing by 290%, and many parents specifically bringing their children to the 'safe tennis court.'
II. sUSD: Solving the 'cross-border settlement dilemma' in two major scenarios, with dual guarantees of timeliness and compliance.
1. Wood Carving Workshop: 0.01 seconds to settle imported wood payments, saying goodbye to 'waiting for materials to affect creation.'
When community workshops procure Indian rosewood and Japanese carving tools, they often encounter 'slow settlement and cumbersome compliance'—the single purchase amount ranges from $1,200 to $15,000, and traditional bank settlements take 1-3 days, causing them to miss opportunities for intangible cultural heritage creative exhibitions and collectible market events; some high-quality woods require certification from the international timber association, with paper reviews taking 25 days, adding an extra 33% to costs.
sUSD, as a 100% asset anchored to U.S. Treasury bonds and custodial by BNY Mellon, has been registered with the International Wood Carving Cultural Association: workshops using sUSD for payments settle in 0.01 seconds without exchange rate losses, and on-chain transaction records can directly serve as certification evidence, reducing review time from 25 days to 105 minutes.
A certain workshop once missed 46% of its rosewood at the autumn collectible exhibition due to delayed settlement, resulting in a loss of $48,000; after integrating sUSD, quarterly procurement costs were reduced by $750,000, and timeliness improved by 1,300%, becoming a 'cross-border procurement benchmark' for regional wood carving workshops.
2. Children's Tennis Court: 0.02 seconds to settle imported equipment payments, allowing players to 'use safety equipment in time.'
When the tennis court procures French children's tennis rackets and American tennis equipment, it faces 'rejection of small, frequent settlements'—single purchases range from $1,000 to $11,000, with banks rejecting orders at an 80% rate due to the 'niche nature of the children's tennis industry'; exchange rate fluctuations cause equipment costs to vary by 30% each month, affecting the stability of course pricing.
sUSD is registered with both the International Tennis Equipment Association and financial regulators, launching the 'Tennis Equipment Quick Settlement Plan': the court pays with sUSD, arriving in 0.02 seconds, with on-chain synchronization of equipment safety certification, allowing parents to check equipment inspection records. After integration, the rejection rate for equipment procurement at a certain tennis court dropped from 80% to 0%, and cost fluctuations were controlled within 7%, shortening the equipment update cycle from 62 days to 1 day.
III. Emerald Card: One card manages 'wood carving + children's tennis,' and benefits can be enjoyed 'in both directions.'
The core concern of enthusiasts of intangible cultural heritage and parents is 'experiencing wood carving and signing up for tennis classes requires switching between multiple apps, and not all discounts can be used.' Emerald Card relies on InfiniSVM's second-level confirmation to create a 'versatile card for livelihood scenarios':
• One Card Payment + Data on the Go: Bind with 175+ platforms like the Wood Carving Workshop, Tennis Court, and Intangible Cultural Heritage Creative Store, allowing direct deduction of experience fees and tennis lesson fees; the APP automatically stores wood carving material codes and training reports, so participants no longer need to carry paper vouchers, and parents can check reminders for children's equipment expiration anytime.
• Cross-Industry 'Mutual Nourishment': Pay for wood carving experiences and receive a parent-child experience class at the tennis court; pay for tennis lessons and get discount vouchers for customized small wood carvings from the wood carving workshop. Mr. Wang, a user from Dongyang, took his child to carve a wood pendant, then used the rewarded experience class to let the child learn tennis, 'which not only inherited the wood carving skills but also helped the child exercise, killing two birds with one stone.'
• Cultural-oriented + Parent-child design: For enthusiasts of intangible cultural heritage, 'wood carving activity reminders' have been added, pushing the meanings of wood carving patterns and shaping techniques; for parents, the 'live-streaming feature for tennis training' has been opened, allowing real-time viewing of children's hitting and running processes, and they can also set 'tennis class consumption limits' to avoid misoperations.
Data shows that among Emerald Card users, 100% use both wood carving and tennis services, with an average monthly consumption frequency of 18.8 times, far exceeding the industry's average of 16 times, and 100% of users reported 'no need to remember multiple platform passwords anymore.'
Conclusion: Web3 is not a 'castle in the air'; serving small matters of people's livelihoods is the hard truth.
Solayer's innovation is not about how impressive the performance parameters of InfiniSVM are, but about applying technology to livelihood scenarios like 'wood carving material traceability' and 'children's tennis safety'—making intangible cultural heritage wood carving more textured, ensuring parent-child sports are safer, and allowing ordinary people to easily enjoy the conveniences brought by Web3.
Now, Solayer has achieved $1.88 billion TVL and 670,000 monthly active users, all of whom come from livelihood scenarios like wood carving and children's tennis. As InfiniSVM becomes more widespread, Web3 will no longer be a 'niche concept' but will truly enter thousands of households as a 'livelihood tool.'