Good ideas are often easy to understand, and everyone can see their value—this is why such ideas can become popular.
dApps should follow this logic as well.
Developing distributed applications doesn't necessarily have to be traditional programming. Using prompts or low-code tools is also feasible. The key is to lower the entry barrier and enable more people to participate.
This line of thinking has already begun to be explored. The future of dApps might just be like this—simple, easy to use, and accessible to everyone.
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GasWaster69
· 01-11 17:50
Nah, this logic is a bit idealistic. The real bottlenecks are still gas fees and network experience.
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FrontRunFighter
· 01-11 16:56
nah look, "people can build dapps now" sounds cute until you realize the dark forest still eats your lunch. lowering barriers? sure, but who's really gonna protect these prompt-cooked contracts from mev extraction and sandwich attacks... nobody talks about that part lmao
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ETHReserveBank
· 01-11 04:59
Low-code is indeed a direction, but to be honest, it's still mostly about cutting leeks now.
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ImpermanentLossFan
· 01-11 04:55
The low-code approach is indeed easy to get started with, but only a few projects can actually run successfully.
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GasFeeCrybaby
· 01-11 04:53
Low-code dApps? Sounds great, but it still feels too idealistic. Once you actually try it, you'll realize how many pitfalls there are.
It's actually not that complicated now.
Good ideas are often easy to understand, and everyone can see their value—this is why such ideas can become popular.
dApps should follow this logic as well.
Developing distributed applications doesn't necessarily have to be traditional programming. Using prompts or low-code tools is also feasible. The key is to lower the entry barrier and enable more people to participate.
This line of thinking has already begun to be explored. The future of dApps might just be like this—simple, easy to use, and accessible to everyone.