Sei's move this time is indeed low-key yet aggressive, directly achieving deep integration with Xiaomi smartphones. Speaking of pre-installation, this was originally our most familiar approach, but it was unexpectedly preempted by a US-based public chain landing first.
I fed the public information about this collaboration into AI and had it estimate how many new users Sei Network could attract through this partnership. From phone shipment volume, wallet activation rates, to actual on-chain activity, the data dimensions are quite comprehensive. The results are quite interesting—if hardware pre-installation proves successful, the user base ceiling is indeed much higher than just doing marketing alone.
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ZenChainWalker
· 10h ago
Xiaomi pre-installation is truly awesome; hardware access is more powerful than any marketing.
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mev_me_maybe
· 12-11 03:34
Yeah, it's pretty intense. We've been doing pre-installed apps in traditional internet for a long time, but I didn't expect public chains to copy us.
If Xiaomi really executes this move well, the potential for user growth is indeed different—much more reliable than just marketing battles.
The hardware-level entry point is truly different; smartphone user numbers are right there.
Wait, the real question is, how many on-chain active users can actually be activated? Just installing the app doesn't guarantee usage, so we need to look at this data carefully.
This operation seems simple but is actually about positioning—first get users into the wallet, then talk.
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LiquidatedDreams
· 12-11 03:30
This routine of pre-installation finally gets used, and the key is that someone actually takes the bait. If Xiaomi can boost the wallet activation rate, then this bet is a win.
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OnchainGossiper
· 12-11 03:26
Oh no, Sei's move was truly brilliant, Xiaomi pre-installation is taking off directly.
Wait a minute, haven't our domestic public chains considered doing this? Why did the American side get to enjoy the benefits first?
From a data perspective, pre-installation is indeed top-notch, but the key is whether users are willing to open their wallets. Anyway, most people around me have deleted most of the pre-installed apps on their phones.
Xiaomi's cooperation this time is quite strong. If they can convert a few million users, will the hardware race change in the future?
To be honest, pre-installation alone isn't enough; there must be killer applications, otherwise, it's just decoration.
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LuckyBlindCat
· 12-11 03:20
Xiaomi was beaten to the punch by Sei first, which is indeed a bit of a loss. We've been using pre-installation as a tactic for so long, and now it's been copied by others.
If it can truly activate users, it will be a different story. Hardware channels are definitely more reliable than spending money on marketing. The ceiling is right there.
However, whether Sei can retain this wave of users still depends on the chain itself. Pre-installation is just the beginning.
Sei's move this time is indeed low-key yet aggressive, directly achieving deep integration with Xiaomi smartphones. Speaking of pre-installation, this was originally our most familiar approach, but it was unexpectedly preempted by a US-based public chain landing first.
I fed the public information about this collaboration into AI and had it estimate how many new users Sei Network could attract through this partnership. From phone shipment volume, wallet activation rates, to actual on-chain activity, the data dimensions are quite comprehensive. The results are quite interesting—if hardware pre-installation proves successful, the user base ceiling is indeed much higher than just doing marketing alone.