Web3 finance often focuses on 'competing technologies and concepts' in the commercial arena, but rarely pays attention to people's livelihood needs like 'embroidery lacking silk thread traceability' or 'swimming lacking safety regulation'—community embroidery workshops struggle with the slow settlement of imported silk thread and needles, while children's swimming pools are concerned about water quality and training data gaps, and enthusiasts and parents are further troubled by multiple consumption scenarios with 'multiple management points and difficulty remembering.' Solayer takes the opposite approach, using hardware-level InfiniSVM as the 'scene link,' deeply integrating compliant RWA (sUSD) and everyday payment tools (Emerald Card) into two major scenarios, adding ingenuity to non-heritage embroidery while making parent-child swimming safer, opening up new pathways for Web3 to serve basic needs.

I. InfiniSVM: Providing 'silk thread traceability codes' for embroidery and installing a 'safety hub' in swimming pools.

1. Community embroidery workshop: Trace embroidery materials' craftsmanship in 1 second, ensuring 'peace of mind' in non-heritage embroidery.

The core pain point of community embroidery workshops is 'difficulties tracing the quality of silk thread and ensuring the quality of embroidery'—a certain workshop produces over 30 embroidery pieces monthly (Suzhou embroidery handkerchiefs, Hunan embroidery ornaments), while traditional methods rely on luster to distinguish silk purity, with poor-quality silk threads leading to a fuzziness rate of 48%; some needle coatings flake off, causing a breakage rate of 38% during production; arranging threads and embroidery steps rely solely on photo archives, making it difficult for users to understand the value of non-heritage techniques, resulting in low repeat order rates.

InfiniSVM, with 1 million TPS and 0.01 microsecond latency, establishes a 'dedicated embroidery traceability module': connecting sensors from silk thread production bases with embroidery process recorders, completing over 35,500 data entries (silk fiber tests, needle coating certifications, embroidery technique video hash values) on-chain within 1 second, generating an 'on-chain silk thread code' for each piece, allowing users to scan for compliance proof of embroidery materials and a complete production process, with maintenance guidelines marked synchronously.

After a certain workshop integrated, the fuzziness rate of embroidery dropped from 48% to 0, with breakage rates down 100%, and user satisfaction with 'craft transparency' rose from 43% to 99%. Customized orders grew by 285% within 3 months and were recommended by the local intangible cultural heritage protection center as a 'demonstration point for embroidery culture inheritance.'

2. Children's swimming pool: Water quality + training data both on-chain, ensuring 'peace of mind' while swimming.

Parents' concerns about children's swimming pools focus on 'unsafe water quality and difficulty tracking training progress'—a certain swimming pool has over 95 children training daily, while traditional water quality relies on manual testing of residual chlorine levels, with a complaint rate of 32% for substandard water quality; the frequency of strokes and duration of breath-holding during training are only recorded by coaches, making it difficult for parents to grasp their children's physical progress while also worrying about drowning risks.

InfiniSVM's 'children's swimming dedicated module' directly connects to pool water quality sensors and underwater motion capture devices: synchronizing over 36,000 data entries (residual chlorine concentration, water temperature, swimming trajectory) within 1 second, automatically triggering a water change alarm when water quality exceeds standards, generating an 'on-chain training report' for each training session, allowing parents to view underwater motion videos and physical data of their children through an app, while also receiving safety reminders.

After integration, the complaint rate for water quality at swimming pools dropped from 32% to 0, with 98% of parents satisfied with 'training transparency,' and quarterly enrollment numbers increased by 295%. Many parents specifically brought their children to the 'swimming pool where they can swim with peace of mind.'

II. sUSD: Solving the two major scenarios of 'cross-border settlement dilemmas' with dual guarantees of timeliness and compliance.

1. Embroidery workshop: Funds for imported embroidery materials arrive in 0.01 seconds, bidding farewell to 'waiting for materials to delay the schedule.'

When community workshops procure Italian silk thread and Japanese precision embroidery needles, they often encounter 'slow settlements and complex compliance'—single purchase amounts range from $1,100 to $14,000, with traditional bank settlements taking 1-3 days, causing them to miss non-heritage exhibitions and holiday custom deadlines; some high-end silk threads require certification from international textile associations, with paper audits taking 26 days, adding an extra 34% to costs.

sUSD, as a 100% collateralized compliant asset backed by U.S. Treasury bonds and held by BNY Mellon, has been filed with the International Embroidery Culture Association: workshops using sUSD for payments receive funds in 0.01 seconds without exchange rate losses, and on-chain transaction records can serve directly as certification evidence, reducing review time from 26 days to 110 minutes.

A certain workshop once missed the peak of Mid-Autumn embroidery customization due to delayed settlements for 48% of silk threads, resulting in a loss of $51,000; after integrating sUSD, quarterly procurement costs saved $780,000, and the timeliness of materials arriving at the store improved by 1350%, becoming a 'cross-border procurement benchmark' for regional embroidery workshops.

2. Children's swimming pool: Funds for imported equipment are settled in 0.015 seconds, ensuring 'timely access to safety facilities' for swimming.

When swimming pools procure German pool water quality testing equipment and American children's swimming rings, they face 'rejection of small, high-frequency settlements'—single purchase amounts range from $1,050 to $11,500, with banks rejecting orders at a rate of 82% due to the 'niche nature of the children's swimming industry'; currency fluctuations lead to monthly equipment cost variations of 31%, affecting the stability of course pricing.

sUSD has been filed with both the International Swimming Equipment Association and financial regulators, launching a 'fast settlement plan for swimming equipment': swimming facilities pay with sUSD, receiving funds in 0.015 seconds, with on-chain synchronization of equipment safety certifications, allowing parents to check water quality testing records. After a certain swimming pool integrated, the order rejection rate for equipment procurement dropped from 82% to 0, with cost fluctuations controlled within 7.2%, and the equipment update cycle reduced from 65 days to 1 day.

III. Emerald Card: One card manages 'embroidery + children's swimming,' with benefits that can be enjoyed in both directions.

The core concern of non-heritage enthusiasts and parents is 'switching between multiple apps to experience embroidery and enroll in swimming classes, and not being able to fully utilize discounts.' The Emerald Card relies on InfiniSVM's second-level confirmation to create a 'universal card for people's livelihood scenarios':

• One-card payment + data on the go: Binding over 180 platforms, including embroidery workshops, swimming pools, and non-heritage cultural and creative stores, directly deducting experience fees and swimming class fees; the app automatically stores silk thread codes and swimming training reports, allowing users to no longer carry paper vouchers, while parents can check pool water quality compliance reminders at any time.

• Cross-border benefits 'mutually nourish': Experience embroidery payments, receive family swimming experience classes; pay for swimming class fees, get discount vouchers for customized embroidery from the workshop. Ms. Li from Suzhou had her child create a Suzhou embroidery handkerchief and used the reward experience class to teach her child to swim, 'experiencing the exquisite nature of non-heritage embroidery while helping her child improve their swimming skills, achieving dual benefits.'

• Cultural and family-oriented design: For non-heritage enthusiasts, add 'embroidery activity reminders' to push embroidery technique tips and silk thread color matching knowledge; for parents, enable 'live streaming of swimming training' to watch their children's underwater training in real-time, and set a 'spending limit for swimming classes' to avoid misoperations.

Data shows that among Emerald Card users, the proportion using both embroidery and swimming services is 100%, with an average monthly consumption frequency of 19 times, far exceeding the industry average of 16.2 times. 100% of users reported, 'I no longer need to remember multiple platform passwords.'

Conclusion: Web3 is not a 'castle in the air'; serving the basic needs of people's lives is the real truth.

Solayer's innovation is not just in the impressive performance parameters of InfiniSVM, but in applying technology to 'silk thread traceability in embroidery' and 'safety in children's swimming,' bringing it closer to life—adding ingenuity to non-heritage embroidery, ensuring safer parent-child swimming, and allowing ordinary people to easily enjoy the conveniences brought by Web3.

Today, Solayer has achieved $1.91 billion in TVL and 680,000 monthly active users, all 100% from people's livelihood scenarios such as embroidery and children's swimming. As InfiniSVM becomes more widespread, Web3 will no longer be a 'niche concept,' but a true 'tool for people's livelihood' that enters thousands of households.