One thing I’ve always liked in certain sci-fi movies is that the most believable technology usually isn’t the loudest.
It’s not the giant flashy screen or the thing that tries hardest to impress you in the first five seconds. It’s the system that feels like it was actually designed to be lived with. Stuff in movies like Her, Ex Machina, or even parts of Black Mirror often works because the technology feels integrated into a whole environment instead of just being there to look futuristic.
That idea came back to me recently while I was looking at a few crypto platforms. Most of them still feel like they’re trying way too hard to prove how powerful they are. More panels, more noise, more features stacked on top of each other.
BYDFi stood out to me mostly because it felt a bit less like that. Not because it was dramatic, but because it gave more of a “complete system” impression. Spot, derivatives, copy trading, bots, fiat access, card-related functions, and support tools all seemed like parts of one environment rather than random features thrown together.
Not trying to turn this into some big recommendation. It just reminded me that the most convincing products, like the most convincing fictional tech, usually feel coherent before they feel impressive.
It’s not the giant flashy screen or the thing that tries hardest to impress you in the first five seconds. It’s the system that feels like it was actually designed to be lived with. Stuff in movies like Her, Ex Machina, or even parts of Black Mirror often works because the technology feels integrated into a whole environment instead of just being there to look futuristic.
That idea came back to me recently while I was looking at a few crypto platforms. Most of them still feel like they’re trying way too hard to prove how powerful they are. More panels, more noise, more features stacked on top of each other.
BYDFi stood out to me mostly because it felt a bit less like that. Not because it was dramatic, but because it gave more of a “complete system” impression. Spot, derivatives, copy trading, bots, fiat access, card-related functions, and support tools all seemed like parts of one environment rather than random features thrown together.
Not trying to turn this into some big recommendation. It just reminded me that the most convincing products, like the most convincing fictional tech, usually feel coherent before they feel impressive.