Talking about why I am still watching @quipnetwork.



Recently, as I keep participating in airdrops, I feel more and more that it's not fun anymore. Many projects are just assembly line work: check-ins, inviting people, completing tasks. When the hype dies down, the project and users disappear together, with no long-term logic.

It was only after seriously experiencing @quipnetwork that I realized it’s different.

At first, I was just casually doing tasks and not taking it seriously. But gradually I found out, it’s not about “pressuring you to do tasks,” but about guiding you step by step to understand the entire network. Many interactions have logic; they’re not just for boosting activity.

What it aims to build is a truly decentralized computing power network—integrating idle computing resources, allowing these resources to genuinely participate in computation instead of being wasted. Currently, the market talks about AI, GPUs, and computing power, but most of it stays at the conceptual level. @quipnetwork is thinking further: the potential changes brought by quantum computing, and the security challenges of existing encryption systems. This direction may be hard for the market to fully understand in the short term, but precisely because of that, it’s worth laying out early.

What I care more about is its business closed loop—it's not just about selling computing power, but enabling developers to connect via SDK, offload complex calculations to the chain, with users paying per use, so the app can earn steadily over cycles. Infrastructure shifts from just a cost to a profit center.

There’s also solid proof on the security front—the post-quantum vault has already protected over one-third of BTC, significantly reducing quantum risks. This isn’t just marketing talk; it’s progress backed by data.

Personally, I look forward to seeing transparent periodic yield dashboards, automatic refunds for SLA failures, and portable receipts that support cross-chain settlement.

In the computing power track, hardware is important, but coordination ability and business closed loops are often more critical. @quipnetwork gives me the feeling that they’re not chasing trends but paving the way for the next-generation infrastructure.

At least for now, it’s one of the few projects I am willing to keep paying attention to.
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