The speed of project iteration is indeed accelerating, and recently Warden Protocol launched a great feature called Studio. This platform allows ordinary users to create their own AI Agents, significantly lowering the entry barrier, and then push these Agents to a broader user base. Although I only have a superficial understanding of this area, from a product logic perspective, Warden's move is quite clever. It gives users the opportunity to learn, to create, and to iterate, gradually developing their own agent systems. This open ecosystem construction approach is worth recognizing. As a low-threshold AI development tool, Warden Studio indeed reduces the difficulty for Web3 developers to participate and provides more people with the chance to try.
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RugpullTherapist
· 01-06 16:37
Really, the low threshold is well done, but I'm just worried it might be another new trick to cut leeks.
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Things like studio seem simple, but there must be pitfalls behind them. Let's wait and see who hits a snag.
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Open ecology sounds good, but the key is whether it can really retain users; otherwise, it will just be an air project.
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Hmm, finally a team is taking product development seriously. It feels like the right pace.
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Normal users creating agents? Sounds like a gimmick. How many can actually be used?
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This idea isn't bad, just not sure how long it can last. Usually, it's all talk and no action.
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Low threshold is indeed attractive, but whether the ecosystem can really become active is the key.
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Forget it, I still don't understand it anyway. I'll wait two months to evaluate. It's too early to say anything now.
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GasFeeCryer
· 01-06 16:33
Creating AI Agents with low barriers is indeed comfortable, but how many projects can truly be established and sustained?
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TrustlessMaximalist
· 01-06 16:21
Lowering the threshold sounds easy, but in reality, it's full of pitfalls. Let's see if it really works before we judge.
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RugPullAlarm
· 01-06 16:21
Low threshold? I haven't seen on-chain data support this claim. What is the user retention rate?
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It's the same open ecosystem story, sounds good... Have you checked the fund flow? How are the large address distributions?
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Wait, how long has this feature been live? What are the real DAU numbers? Don't just hype the product logic.
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"Providing users with learning opportunities"—this phrase sounds like an excuse for low adoption rates.
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Has the smart contract audit report been released? I don't trust just the product logic; on-chain data must speak for itself.
The speed of project iteration is indeed accelerating, and recently Warden Protocol launched a great feature called Studio. This platform allows ordinary users to create their own AI Agents, significantly lowering the entry barrier, and then push these Agents to a broader user base. Although I only have a superficial understanding of this area, from a product logic perspective, Warden's move is quite clever. It gives users the opportunity to learn, to create, and to iterate, gradually developing their own agent systems. This open ecosystem construction approach is worth recognizing. As a low-threshold AI development tool, Warden Studio indeed reduces the difficulty for Web3 developers to participate and provides more people with the chance to try.