Chainfeeds Introduction:
Let’s take a look at Anoma’s intention-based product design philosophy, ecosystem development progress, and future roadmap.
Article Source:
https://www.techflowpost.com/article/detail_28380.html
Article author:
TechFlow
Viewpoint:
Adrian Brink: Anoma is a Web3 distributed operating system that allows users' favorite applications to run seamlessly on different chains, no matter where they are hosted. We can think of Anoma as Windows 95: software such as Microsoft Word can run "out of the box" regardless of whether the underlying hardware is an Intel CPU or an AMD CPU. Similarly, Anoma allows your applications to run wherever the operating system exists. I use the example of Windows because it is more widely known, but Anoma is actually completely open source and closer to early versions of Linux, except that Anoma focuses more on ease of use. Early Linux was very difficult to use for most people, and Windows struck a balance between openness and ease of use, which is also the goal we strive for in Anoma. If you want to build an application on Anoma, please contact me on Telegram and we can discuss how to provide you with the best support. What's particularly exciting about the topic of RWA and AI right now is that most people are still stuck in the "pre-intents" phase. While some are starting to design specialized intent solutions for specific trading scenarios, AI-driven RWA applications require thousands of general intents, and there's currently almost no infrastructure to support them all. Anoma is the only place where you can start building on open, intent-native infrastructure, whether you're building AI or RWA applications. I don't have a preference for any particular RWA team, but there are several that are quite interesting. RWA is strongly tied to local markets. For example, if you want to tokenize Chinese stocks, the team will almost certainly be in Hong Kong; if you want to tokenize US stocks, the team will likely be in the US. The challenge lies in connecting these globally. We need to build a multi-faceted trust model so that users can trade tokenized Chinese and US stocks simultaneously within a single application. This is exactly where Anoma excels: providing excellent support for these types of applications and scenarios. When I think about what Anoma is doing, I'm excited about our progress: today's financial system is still built on technology from the 1960s, 1980s, and 1980s. This system was designed for an era before widespread internet adoption, before user numbers exploded, and before attacks were limited. It's now obsolete. Anoma is rebuilding the financial interoperability layer: providing a modern interoperability infrastructure upon which banks, countries, and communities can build their own financial systems. In this sense, Anoma's open source technology stack is the ideal path to upgrade this outdated financial system to the new era. As the internet scales, we need a more robust financial interoperability infrastructure, and Anoma is the perfect solution. I'm excited about enterprise adoption, especially among Web2 enterprises. In my opinion, no company will trust the global Ethereum network to protect their systems. They prefer to maintain their own sovereign infrastructure. Anoma is designed for this purpose. You can deploy Anoma internally and decide for yourself what data and interoperability to expose. Once you start exposing some information, many applications will be able to connect not only to your sovereign stack but also to the global Anoma network and even to applications on Ethereum, enabling global collaboration and allowing users to seamlessly switch between local, enterprise, and global infrastructure. For example, if you're a bank and want to support users depositing ETH, currently this typically involves custom integration with Ethereum. In the future, you can directly integrate Anoma, running a local Anoma instance within your bank, and users can transfer ETH to your local Anoma instance.
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