I've been vibing with the concept of 'operational link length' to gauge the real friendliness of an ecosystem lately. The longer the link, the more failure points there are; the more failure points, the easier it is for users to get turned off. A lot of poor experiences aren't due to a lack of features, but because every action requires multiple hops, more authorizations, and waiting through several rounds. A mature ecosystem should compress common actions into the shortest path: just transfer, just swap, just deploy—allowing users to hit their targets without incurring extra learning and emotional costs.
With shorter links, user behavior naturally leans towards high frequency: small amounts, multiple trades, dynamic rebalancing, and regular reinvestment. These actions may seem basic, but they dictate whether compound interest can kick in. Compounding isn't about getting rich overnight; it's about consistently minimizing hidden losses over the long haul, allowing strategies to execute reliably. If the ecosystem can empower regular users to tackle these 'repetitive actions', it will create stronger inertia: daily real turnover, funds more willing to settle, applications more eager to develop, and growth becoming more resilient to cycles.
@Justin Sun_孙宇晨 #TronEcoSatr