These days, I've been talking about sharding and parallel processing again. It's quite lively, but my first reaction is still: where to put the assets, and whether they can be withdrawn. Honestly, no matter how fast the scalability is, if there's a bridge issue or the contract permissions are unclear, there's nowhere to run. My biggest fear isn't slowness; it's chaos — with slow, I can still calculate gas and wait for confirmations, but when things get messy, I can't even tell which transaction to cancel.



Some people also interpret ETF capital flows and U.S. stock risk appetite as tied to the rise and fall of the crypto market... It sounds reasonable, but in actual trading, you still need to follow your own exit strategy: first, think clearly about what to do if the chain gets congested, nodes fork, or the packager malfunctions — how to withdraw, how to switch back to the mainnet, how to reduce authorization risks. Anyway, I now prefer to earn less rather than become a test subject for "new narratives" and their trial-and-error costs.
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