Yesterday, I was assembling an IKEA wardrobe at home, and the experience was just terrible!
The cabinet materials are very thick, and the instructions are clearly drawn, but in the end, I was missing a small screw for the fixed back panel. Just this few cents item turned a several hundred dollar cabinet into a 'dangerous building,' completely unusable. I was so angry that I threw the screwdriver and wanted to curse 😂
This matter increasingly resembles the current AI circle:
Marc, these big shots like a16z talk every day about how amazing AI is, saving populations, agent collaboration; it all sounds like high-end concepts, just like a pre-assembled wardrobe. But the real 'core components' that make AI run and work steadily for the long term are never mentioned!
Until I came across Vanarchain, I was immediately captivated.
They never engage in those flashy grand narratives, just like quietly handing a nail under a big shot's tweet: For AI to truly enhance productivity, it must be able to act, have memory, and keep working.
This statement hits too hard, directly exposing the current Achilles' heel of AI:
Today's AI is impressive at writing copy and creating art, but can it manage assets on-chain for a month? The next day it forgets who you are and directly goes on strike when faced with data issues. This is disposable intelligence, hardly practical.
Vanar's persistent memory + on-chain reasoning is like giving AI a 'brain' and 'limbs', transforming it from a 'one-time toy' into a 'long-term worker'.
My personal view:
Vanar's strategy is too clever, a low-key approach to reinforcing weaknesses with a 'nailing' tactic.
While others discuss macro topics, it focuses on practical implementation; while others boast concepts, it emphasizes validation. Not seeking the spotlight, but filling the most critical gaps—without it, all AI concepts will ultimately fall apart.
Of course, the side effects are very real: $VANRY is only 0.006 now, grinding along with the market, lacking excitement and FOMO, pure torment for those looking to make quick money.
But for those in it for the long haul, this is a great opportunity to seize.
In 2026, AI will inevitably evolve from a 'chat tool' to a 'productivity tool'.
In the gold rush, those selling shovels make quick money, but those selling nails are the ones who laugh last.
Don't miss this key nail from Vanar that will determine the future of AI!