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Good morning! The group friends started exercising early in the morning. I don't understand what they're practicing? Is there anyone who understands?
Do you remember the time of Diem? It started with a bang, but ended up in a mess. At that time, Meta spent tens of billions of dollars, claiming to disrupt global payments, but what happened? As soon as regulation came in, they knelt down. To be honest, this taught a vivid lesson to the entire Web3: no matter how advanced the technology is, if you don't understand human relationships, you won't be able to succeed.
Have you guys noticed? Aptos @Aptos is much smarter. It's the same technology developed by the Diem team, but instead of shouting slogans and making empty promises, they quietly rebranded the Move language to emphasize "seamless trust." What they are promoting now isn't some abstract number like TPS in the tens of thousands, but rather something users can directly experience, like "as smooth as everyday chatting."
This is the key! Diem lost because it was too arrogant, thinking that being Facebook meant it could do whatever it wanted, but ended up crossing regulatory lines. What about Aptos? It came out stating that it wants to innovate "within a compliant framework," and the team even included regulatory experts, which shows a significant awareness. Moreover, it doesn't touch on sensitive terms like global payment systems, but instead focuses on user pain points such as asset security and interaction smoothness, using Move's resource model to address the core anxiety of "will my assets be lost?"
The most interesting part is community operations. Back when Diem was treated like a state secret, Aptos was out there every day in the developer community listening to feedback. Last week at the developer conference in New York, a guy said, "For the first time using Web3, I didn't feel like a victim," and this statement is more effective than any white paper. Now everyone in the circle is saying that Aptos has truly transformed Diem's technological legacy into the sense of security that users need.
At the end of the day, Web3 is not about who writes better code, but about who understands people better. The lesson from Diem tells us that regulation is not an enemy but a partner, and user trust is more important than anything else. Aptos's recent moves, rather than being a technical upgrade, can be seen as an evolution of emotional intelligence. Do you think this is what the next generation of public chains should look like?
#Aptos