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Many people who haven't developed AI applications before tend to misunderstand industry problems as issues with model capability—whether the model is powerful enough, inference is fast enough, or costs are low enough.
But those who have actually built applications quickly realize a more practical pain point: it's not that the models aren't strong enough, but that integration is too complicated.
Each platform has its own standards, certification methods, and calling logic. You just finished adapting one interface, thinking you're finally ready to start building your product, only to find that the next model requires re-integrating an entirely new system.
This feeling is very much like traveling between different countries—every time you arrive somewhere, you need to change the plug. You're not creating new value; you're just constantly repeating adaptation.
Time is consumed, patience is drained, and most importantly, creativity is also being depleted. So when I first saw @dgrid_ai offering a unified AI RPC interface, what truly struck me wasn't the technical complexity but a long-missed simplicity.
With $DGAI 's network architecture, developers only need to connect once to access the entire AI computing network. At that moment, it felt less like using a specific AI product and more like connecting to an infrastructure node.
The difference between these two is profound: products are used, while infrastructure is relied upon. A unified entry point may seem like just saving some development time, but its deeper impact is lowering the barrier to entry for the entire industry.
When integration is no longer a burden, and calls become as natural as a regular network request, applications will start to grow on their own.
Not because of subsidies, not because of marketing, but because resistance has disappeared.
Many technological revolutions truly occur not when a feature suddenly becomes more powerful, but when something that was once complex suddenly becomes simple.
When AI calls start to feel as natural as browsing the internet, innovation often erupts unexpectedly.
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