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Web3 developers often complain about a pain point: decentralized storage protocol interfaces are too complicated. The documentation is hard to understand, API call logic is convoluted, and they have to handle XOR operations and data slicing verification themselves. Small teams simply can't manage it.
However, there is a project aiming to solve this issue from a developer's perspective — they introduced the RedStuff encoding scheme, with a straightforward core idea: simplifying complexity.
**Significantly improved interface friendliness**. Developers no longer need to delve into underlying principles; they can complete data upload, download, and verification by directly calling standardized interfaces. Beginner developers can also get started quickly. It supports mainstream languages like Solidity, Rust, JavaScript, and more, so no matter what tech stack you use, integration is possible.
**Documentation and tools are also in place**. They provide detailed interface descriptions and practical case libraries covering scenarios such as social media, blockchain games, AI data storage, and more. Developers can directly reference and adapt. The testing environment even offers free test tokens and node resources, allowing storage functions to be verified on testnets with zero cost and risk.
This combination indeed lowers the adaptation threshold. For projects wanting to quickly integrate decentralized storage features, it saves a lot of preliminary research and adaptation time.