People are getting tired of pretending they can keep up, not with technology, with speed.
Every week crypto feels faster than the week before. New narratives, new agents, new launches, new dashboards, new “game-changing” systems appearing nonstop until eventually nothing even feels important anymore because the market barely sits still long enough for people to process anything properly.
That creates a strange effect after a while. The more information exists, the shorter people’s attention becomes toward all of it.
I started thinking about that while looking deeper into @OpenLedger recently. Everybody keeps discussing AI like the future belongs to whoever generates the most output, but honestly the internet already feels overloaded with output. The harder problem now is making information feel valuable before people mentally discard it five seconds later.
That’s why the ecosystem direction around #OpenLedger feels different to me compared to typical AI narratives floating around crypto timelines. The project seems positioned closer to structured contribution and focused coordination instead of endless content generation. Smaller specialized ecosystems. More targeted intelligence. Less dependence on flooding users with infinite recycled information just to stay visible.
Because people do not remember everything online. They remember environments that consistently help them think better.
That’s partly why $OPEN keeps staying on my radar lately while a lot of other AI narratives start blending together for me. The long-term opportunity may not come from producing more intelligence than everybody else. It may come from organizing intelligence in a way people can still meaningfully use once the internet becomes completely overwhelmed with generated noise.
