In the decentralized storage sector, there are a multitude of technical solutions. Over the past year, I systematically evaluated the mainstream players and reached a conclusion: in large-file production-level applications, emerging storage protocols have already significantly surpassed previous generations in overall performance. This is not a guess, but a result derived after dissecting the core bottlenecks of each solution.



**The Ceiling of Existing Solutions**

IPFS's content addressing logic is indeed elegant, but the problem lies in persistence—you constantly rely on pinning services to keep data alive. This instability poses a real threat to critical business operations. Filecoin took a different approach; its market mechanism design is quite good, but the complexity of deal negotiations and the cost threshold of PoRep calculations are too high, making it difficult for ordinary developers to handle. As for Arweave, permanent storage sounds very attractive, but read performance becomes a bottleneck—especially latency during cross-region access, which essentially kills high-frequency read application scenarios.

**Breakthroughs of New Solutions**

There is an emerging protocol with a particularly interesting design approach that directly addresses these pain points. Its advantages are reflected in three dimensions:

First, it uses a 2D erasure coding technology that fundamentally improves storage efficiency, significantly reducing redundancy factors and bandwidth consumption during repair. Second, by combining a certain public blockchain's parallel execution capability with CDN acceleration, it unleashes astonishing read throughput. Third, its cost model is dollar-pegged, with early subsidies further lowering the usage threshold. These three points are not isolated features but work together as a cohesive whole.

**Empirical Data Speaks**

I tested the same 1GB dataset across several solutions. The results are as follows:

Lowest upload cost—during subsidy periods, basically free. Fastest read speed—measured at an average of around 250MB/s, which is quite impressive for storage protocols. Highest recovery reliability—even simulating 40% node downtime, success rate remains stably at 100%.

The payment mechanism is also much simpler. Node rewards are directly linked to actual storage volume, completely avoiding the complex penalty mechanisms like those of some top-tier Filecoin, resulting in much lower operational and maintenance costs.

**Current Status and Variables**

The mainnet is now running stably, with the amount of stored data accelerating. The only ongoing concern is how the market elasticity of prices will perform after subsidies gradually phase out. However, considering the structural competitive advantages established at the technological efficiency level, long-term cost competitiveness should still be promising.
FIL-6,33%
AR-10,01%
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DegenWhisperervip
· 01-17 05:13
250MB/s? Bro, that's pretty impressive. Filecoin should have given way long ago.
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SocialFiQueenvip
· 01-15 01:48
Subsidies cut, prices soar. How long can the joy of free riding last?
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FadCatchervip
· 01-15 01:43
Wait, 250MB/s, is that real? This data is pretty impressive, I need to test it myself to believe it.
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ConfusedWhalevip
· 01-15 01:39
Once the subsidy withdrawal begins, the project will immediately fail; I've seen this trick many times.
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MultiSigFailMastervip
· 01-15 01:26
How long can the days of free subsidies last? Can we still win after the subsidies taper off?
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