Standing at the starting point of a new year, the story of this project is truly beginning to unfold. The goals outlined above are very clear—shifting from the infrastructure building phase to a comprehensive explosion of ecological applications.
How exactly will this be done? First, by expanding the application side. Mira Flows will no longer remain in the testing phase; the plan is to bridge the data gap between Web2 and Web3, enabling hundreds and thousands of enterprise AI applications to run on Mira. This is quite significant—it’s like opening a door for traditional enterprises to access the blockchain.
From an architectural perspective, this involves coordination across multiple dimensions such as data flow, application compatibility, and ecological support. It’s not just a simple technical upgrade, but a systematic expansion of ecological capabilities.
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GateUser-9ad11037
· 11h ago
Forget it, it's the same old pie chart scene, I haven't seen any real money yet.
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failed_dev_successful_ape
· 11h ago
Web2 and Web3 integration? Sounds good, but actually implementing it is another matter. Just look at how many projects were hyping this up last year.
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SigmaValidator
· 11h ago
Really? Is Mira serious this time? Can those Web2 companies really go on-chain? I'm a bit skeptical.
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ForeverBuyingDips
· 11h ago
Really, connecting Web2 and Web3? Sounds good, but I always feel like it's just another hype...
Wait, Mira Flows is really going to launch a testnet? If it can run enterprise-level applications this time, I’ll believe you.
By the way, hundreds or thousands of applications can run on it? That requires a pretty strong architecture, brother, that’s a bit of an exaggeration.
Let’s get on board first, anyway, this isn’t the first time I’ve heard such promises.
Ecosystem expansion sounds big, but how exactly will it expand? Are there benchmark data?
If this thing really launches in 2026, it might be something, but it’s too early to draw conclusions now.
Will Web2 enterprises really come over? That’s the key, right?
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MEVSandwichVictim
· 11h ago
Bridging Web2 and Web3? Sounds good, but I'm afraid we're still in the pie-in-the-sky stage... Let's see if it can really be implemented before talking about it.
Let's talk about Mira's 2026 plan.
Standing at the starting point of a new year, the story of this project is truly beginning to unfold. The goals outlined above are very clear—shifting from the infrastructure building phase to a comprehensive explosion of ecological applications.
How exactly will this be done? First, by expanding the application side. Mira Flows will no longer remain in the testing phase; the plan is to bridge the data gap between Web2 and Web3, enabling hundreds and thousands of enterprise AI applications to run on Mira. This is quite significant—it’s like opening a door for traditional enterprises to access the blockchain.
From an architectural perspective, this involves coordination across multiple dimensions such as data flow, application compatibility, and ecological support. It’s not just a simple technical upgrade, but a systematic expansion of ecological capabilities.