DADI > created decentralized web-services > 10x cheaper than AWS > production traffic live on founding nodes > waitlist with 100s of new clients > great tokenomics > team of chads running profitable business since 2013 > only 2.5M marketcap
Lmfao, because biz loves buying after something has already 5-10x. Apparently you can get buy orders filled on bitfinex using hidden and scaled.
Austin Ortiz
SONM is fucking cool too. I'm buying both.
Dylan Bennett
Buying is kind of hard, no sellers, but yeah hidden and scaled on bitfinex or wait for some larger bid on kucoin. I bought 80k yesterday, was some work but not that hard
sonm is def also something to look out for, although I don't think they have any security concept
Asher Martin
Hard to have security in a decentralized compute cluster. Basically anyone can be low level jacked into the hardware without traceability. Reputations can help, but it's not a perfect solution.
Mason Cruz
DADI and also RLC use SGX (or similar trusted execution environments), which should be good enough security.
What I particulary like about DADI is that they do auto-scaling of workloads, which means that work and also files are distributed on different nodes by default, and based on the load requirements. So in that sense its much more ahead than RLC or sonm, where you can only rent a single node.
Nathan Howard
stop talking shit retard. Node is server/pc, you buy resources from a pool where the task gets distributed.
Lucas Parker
Good job of calling me a retard, when you can't even formulate a coherent sentence.
Colton Lopez
you are retard if you do not understand from my post that pool consist of unlimited amount of nodes. so fuck off you hired shill
Angel Stewart
Is it best to compare to like RAID striping/cloning but spread out on a network?
Concept seeks very interesting. I was listening to the cofounder of Salesforce talk about edge computing and 5g, but he's doing it with video encoders or some shit
Eli Butler
Nah mate. You just didn't understand or care to understand what I meant with auto-scaling.
Because I'm here so you can learn, here's what autoscaling is:
AWS Auto Scaling monitors your applications and automatically adjusts capacity to maintain steady, predictable performance at the lowest possible cost. Using AWS Auto Scaling, it’s easy to setup application scaling for multiple resources across multiple services in minutes. The service provides a simple, powerful user interface that lets you build scaling plans for resources including Amazon EC2 instances and Spot Fleets, Amazon ECS tasks, Amazon DynamoDB tables and indexes, and Amazon Aurora Replicas. AWS Auto Scaling makes scaling simple with recommendations that allow you to optimize performance, costs, or balance between them. If you’re already using Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling to dynamically scale your Amazon EC2 instances, you can now combine it with AWS Auto Scaling to scale additional resources for other AWS services. With AWS Auto Scaling, your applications always have the right resources at the right time.
It’s easy to get started with AWS Auto Scaling using the AWS Management Console, Command Line Interface (CLI), or SDK. AWS Auto Scaling is available at no additional charge. You pay only for the AWS resources needed to run your applications and Amazon CloudWatch monitoring fees. aws.amazon.com/en/autoscaling/
sure in RLC you have a pool of nodes. But you can only send one task there and have to specify how often it is executed. And thats fine, RLC is not designed to host websites (its for long term compute tasks), while dadi is specifically for web-services
Camden Wood
Well RAID is for storage, which DADI also does in a distributed way (DADI Store),
but yeah, if you host a website and say you get 1000 request, the network will automatically spin up 100 nodes to serve these requests in parallel
Ian Campbell
Yup, edge is def one of the most exciting developments in the CS next to deep learning right now.
I know Own (CHX) will be doing a similar business model for their clients. People scream "scam", but it's actually more generous than typical business models since a lot of revenue is going back to the community and users. I think YouTube and Instagram were the first profitable models, and these new decentralized networks will be a newer way.
Jace Perry
Yup, after having convinced myself that we will not see a bull market of stupid money like 2017 again, I have been thinking about the criteria that projects need to succeed long-term
For me, (besides having a great team and existing clients) the main point is the alignment of customer, company and investor interests.
For DADI I have found that they should have a self-enforcing positive network effect, once the ball starts rolling: new customers -> more network profits -> incentives new nodes to come online -> supply is reduced by node staking -> price increase
that way node operators and token holders are also incentivised to spread the word about DADI. win win win :)
Colton Kelly
I'm with you. This sort of project seems like one of the only useful usecases in crypto/blockchain. Sure we will have stable coins, ETH, and BTC as a separate hedge currency, but mostly everything else will be vaporware.
Jacob Carter
any working website that is using this?
Blake Reed
Monocle and versus.com for example And also the dadi.cloud website itself
So how is this supposed to work exactly? Because who-hosts-this.com says dadi.cloud is hosted by vultr.com.
Ayden Smith
dadi is a scam.
Leo Hall
Basically the top-level nodes handle the incoming requests, which is forwarded to the hosts:
You can think of a DADI Gateway as the master node in an ad hoc cluster comprising one Gateway and many Hosts. The Gateway is the entry point for Consumer requests. It handles Host authentication, translates requests to Jobs, manages a Job request pool, maintains a Pub/Sub messaging system and verifies responses from Hosts. Stargates are identical to Gateways, but come with the addition of a DNS layer - an authoritative nameserver - that manages domain mapping into the DADI Network; a Zoopkeeper installation that maintains the VPC; a CLI interface that manages container deployment to Hosts; and a contract management layer for Consumer-DADI negotiation.
from dadi whitepaper. So I guess the stargate nearest to you (which gets your request) is hosted on vultr
>So I guess the stargate nearest to you (which gets your request) is hosted on vultr
Interesting! It says choopa for me, and no host was found for versus.com. I could see this being very useful if they could get streaming to work on it.
Caleb Campbell
imagine being on Jow Forums and caring about the name of a token while clients are lining up in the waitlist because of the 10x price savings vs AWS
Xavier Cook
Is 100mil the capped supply?
Andrew Cooper
Ha, dadi.cloud is also vultr for me, while versus.com is choopa. Although I'm not sure how reliable this host finding works with decentralized networks^^
Ja
Bentley Thompson
So if this becomes a widely used network, 20 bil seems conservative based on Metcaffe's Law. But, that's IF it gets used and adopted. Seems like they're off to a great start.
Levi Cook
That would be nice, because I would be fkn rich then.
But realistically, I see a heavily undervalued coin right now, not only by crypto standards, but also common sense.. they already make $200k monthly from existing clients using their web-services on AWS, which as of today being directed to the decentralized network
>they already make $200k monthly from existing clients using their web-services on AWS
Wtf, does that mean that will eventually go into the network via DADI tokens? Where did you get that number?
Daniel Moore
Yes, actually a part of it is going into the network right now already. They stated that they can't share the companies which are already switched over to the network because its commercially sensitive information.
it's too centralized (and shady) desu. better off waiting for something better.
Owen Reyes
Oh my fuck, $250 bil market, so if they even get 1% that's 2.5 billion. FOMO.
Jace Robinson
The network itself is decentralized, the company isn't. I don't believe in decentralized or autonomous organizations (yet).
Whats shady about it?
Alexander Hughes
I thought they technically were a DAO or nonprofit.
Asher Cox
I can't find a list of stargates/gateways for starters. And why is the company "making profit"? What about the coins? It's more like a rental service than a decentralized blockchain thingy. Might as well buy XRP
Isaiah Hill
80% of revenue goes to nodes, 10% to ecosystem fund and 10% to foundation (non-profit org)
You'll have to ask them for that list, a network visualization is going up this month, which will include them I think
Only because it uses blockchain doesn't mean it can't be for-profit or needing to be fully autonomous. They said they are commited to fully opening the network to everyone and making the autonomous based on smart contracts, but scaling the network is more important first.
How do you think a project like this would finance itself longterm. Waiting for the tokens to pump and sell-off isn't exactly a long-term viable business model desu..
Aiden Morales
* making the complete system autonomous
Jaxson Morgan
Sounds like a DAO to me. ZEN, ZCash, and EOS are pretty similar, but I don't think block one takes any profits from transactions because they're already sitting on an ETH warchest.
Jaxson Adams
The thing is, after a blockchain is built, the developers can basically lay back and chill. Like Dan Larimer is doing lol.
The decentralized cloud needs to be constantly developed and upgraded, to compete with giants like AWS. So a for-profit model actually aligns interests of investors and company better than non-profit, imho
Robert Bailey
technicals look terrible. this coin has a ridiculous amount of bagholders. why should this rise?
Gavin Stewart
Yeah fucking chart looks just like this shitcoin (pic related)