Gm CT
Most people focus on the post quantum narrative when discussing @quipnetwork.
But the more interesting thesis may be the compute infrastructure itself.
The idea is not just protecting systems against future cryptographic risks.
It's about turning fragmented computing resources into a unified, accessible marketplace.
Current ecosystem metrics already show growing participation:
โข 160+ PFLOPS of compute capacity
โข 500+ active nodes
โข 20K+ quantum resistant wallets
โข $1M+ in protected value
โข 13K+ pre mainnet participants
The broader vision is straightforward:
Instead of compute remaining isolated across different providers and environments, resources from CPUs, GPUs, and eventually quantum processors can be coordinated through a common network layer.
If successful, that creates a more open market for computation itself.
Historically, major infrastructure shifts happened when access became easier:
โข railroads connected regions
โข electricity connected industries
โข the internet connected information
The long term bet behind Quip appears to be that compute becomes another globally accessible utility layer.
A place where workloads can move across different forms of hardware without users needing to worry about the underlying complexity.
Whether the network reaches that scale remains to be seen.
But the combination of decentralized compute, quantum readiness, and cross hardware coordination is certainly a more ambitious vision than simply launching another blockchain.
In that context, $QUIP is designed to coordinate incentives, participation, and resource allocation across the network's evolving compute economy ๐ธ.