I used to think infrastructure became more valuable as it became more visible.

Lately I am starting to think the opposite may be true.

The most important systems are often the ones users barely notice.

Operating systems are a good example.

Most people do not spend their day thinking about them.

They simply expect everything to work together.

Applications.

Resources.

Processes.

Data.

The operating system quietly coordinates it all in the background.

That idea kept coming to mind while I was exploring Bedrock 2.0.

As BTCFi continues to expand Bitcoin capital is no longer limited to a single destination.

It can move across different strategies protocols and opportunities.

The challenge is not a lack of options.

It is coordinating those options efficiently.

That is where concepts like uniBTC become interesting.

Not simply as another asset.

But as part of a broader coordination layer that helps connect Bitcoin liquidity with multiple parts of an evolving ecosystem.

What stands out to me is that the conversation begins to shift away from individual products.

Instead the focus moves toward the infrastructure that allows different products and strategies to work together.

In many ways that feels similar to what operating systems did for computing.

They did not replace applications.

They made them easier to coordinate.

The more I watch BTCFi develop the more I think the long term winners may not be the platforms that offer the most opportunities.

They may be the platforms that make an increasingly complex ecosystem feel simple to navigate.

#Bedrock $BR @Bedrock $EVAA $CLO

What will matter most for the future of BTCFi?

More Opportunities
Higher Yields
Better Coordination
Greater Liquidity
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