Recently, I have been researching the oracle track again.

The reason is simple: Many new projects have increasingly complex on-chain behaviors, and the speed and customization capabilities of traditional oracles can no longer meet the current demands.

During this process, I seriously used Switchboard for the first time.

The most surprising thing for me was its "no permission required" and "easy customization of price feeds."

In the past, pulling a new data source involved a heavy and slow process, often getting stuck in approvals; but on Switchboard, I can directly integrate Web2 or Web3 data myself, without any unnecessary barriers.

The speed is indeed fast; the official claim is that it is about three hundred times faster than traditional solutions, and from my actual experience, the latency is indeed much lower.

I also specifically looked at its implementation on-chain.

Projects like Jito, Drift, and Kamino are already using its data services, protecting on-chain value exceeding $5 billion.

This indicates that this system is not just theoretical capability but is genuinely undertaking core business.

What concerns me more is the market capitalization.

Such a scale of application, such speed and customization capabilities, are hardly seen in old-brand oracles, yet its current market cap is just over $10 million.

To put it bluntly, the market has not yet priced its potential.

If you are also paying attention to the oracle track, or looking for oracle solutions that can adapt to new chains and new structures, Switchboard is worth trying yourself before making a judgment.

I started from a simple trial, and my perception of this project changed. $SWTCH