Imagine blockchain as a rapidly expanding city—Sui is the central highway that handles tens of thousands of vehicles per second. And the Walrus ecosystem? It’s like the nearly infinite, faultless digital warehouse beneath this city.
Looking back from early 2026, Web3 has long moved beyond mere asset speculation into large-scale application. Interestingly, the boundaries between the data availability layer (DA) and decentralized storage are merging. Walrus is a product of this trend—it evolved from an experimental idea in Mysten Labs into a reality, now serving as the foundational support for social media, AI model training, and on-chain high-definition video streaming.
To truly understand Walrus, one must first let go of old notions of storage. Filecoin is more like a digital cold storage—where you put historical data and rarely need to access it. Walrus is entirely different; it’s a digital hologram. Its core technology is Red Stuff erasure coding, which fragments data and disperses it across global nodes. What’s the power? Even if two-thirds of the network nodes suddenly go offline, you can still fully restore the data using the remaining fragments. This surge in read speed allows it to directly outpace competitors in the DA race in the second half of 2025, not only matching traditional rivals but even achieving overtaking in curves. This shift in design philosophy marks the arrival of the next-generation storage infrastructure.
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MaticHoleFiller
· 5h ago
Walrus's technical approach is truly brilliant. The erasure coding logic of breaking apart and reassembling is far more advanced than Filecoin's "storage warehouse" concept.
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GreenCandleCollector
· 11h ago
Redundant erasure coding is truly amazing. Even if two-thirds of the nodes go offline, it can still recover... This isn't storage, is it magic?
Wait, can Walrus really recover even if two-thirds of the nodes go offline? If that's true, it must be incredibly robust...
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DaoDeveloper
· 01-09 16:59
ngl the erasure coding mechanic here is wild—three-thirds redundancy is genuinely different from filecoin's cold storage model. but real talk, has anyone actually stress-tested walrus with that 2/3 node failure scenario in mainnet conditions? seems theoretical rn
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GateUser-c802f0e8
· 01-09 16:58
The Red Powder Erasure Code architecture is indeed robust. Can it recover with two-thirds of the nodes offline? How decentralized does that make it?
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0xSleepDeprived
· 01-09 16:58
Red粉纠删码 is indeed impressive; I don't know how much better it is compared to the Filecoin cold storage approach.
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SelfRugger
· 01-09 16:57
Redundant erasure codes sound awesome, but can they really withstand the pressure of large-scale applications, or are they just another lab concept?
Imagine blockchain as a rapidly expanding city—Sui is the central highway that handles tens of thousands of vehicles per second. And the Walrus ecosystem? It’s like the nearly infinite, faultless digital warehouse beneath this city.
Looking back from early 2026, Web3 has long moved beyond mere asset speculation into large-scale application. Interestingly, the boundaries between the data availability layer (DA) and decentralized storage are merging. Walrus is a product of this trend—it evolved from an experimental idea in Mysten Labs into a reality, now serving as the foundational support for social media, AI model training, and on-chain high-definition video streaming.
To truly understand Walrus, one must first let go of old notions of storage. Filecoin is more like a digital cold storage—where you put historical data and rarely need to access it. Walrus is entirely different; it’s a digital hologram. Its core technology is Red Stuff erasure coding, which fragments data and disperses it across global nodes. What’s the power? Even if two-thirds of the network nodes suddenly go offline, you can still fully restore the data using the remaining fragments. This surge in read speed allows it to directly outpace competitors in the DA race in the second half of 2025, not only matching traditional rivals but even achieving overtaking in curves. This shift in design philosophy marks the arrival of the next-generation storage infrastructure.