I've been observing the movements of a certain Layer2 project recently, and their current state feels like a restaurant frantically testing dishes before opening—on the surface, they're refining the menu, but in reality, they're trying to prevent the kitchen from collapsing when a flood of customers arrives after launch.
The tech team is taking a very pragmatic approach: while there's not yet large-scale traffic, they're fixing the underlying infrastructure issues first. Tackling technical debt ahead of time like this is much wiser than scrambling to patch things up after users start pouring in.
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I've been observing the movements of a certain Layer2 project recently, and their current state feels like a restaurant frantically testing dishes before opening—on the surface, they're refining the menu, but in reality, they're trying to prevent the kitchen from collapsing when a flood of customers arrives after launch.
The tech team is taking a very pragmatic approach: while there's not yet large-scale traffic, they're fixing the underlying infrastructure issues first. Tackling technical debt ahead of time like this is much wiser than scrambling to patch things up after users start pouring in.