I haven't seen a more hard-working team then Stratis' one. I think you don't realise what kind of technology we have here. We are talking about a revolution in the enterprise world and not only that,but in all of the existing industries. In a few months time I'm sure we will have smart contracts ready to launch in full production ready. By that time thousands of C# devs and companies would have developed something using Stratis tech and I am being real conservative. There have been longer bear markets in the history, but it cannot continue much more with all the achievements different projects touch. The products are starting to be rolled and use-cases to be fulfilled. You can think whatever you want, I am a trader as well and I am scalping with other coins here and there, but not with STRAT. This is a fucking gem and I couldn't afford to lose even a couple of them.
you don't understand how adoption works. I believe the tech is real, but blockchain is barely 10 years old, and most businesses aren't even 5 years old. Most (99%) only have working prototypes, and in that case I'm also really conservative. The companies you speak of when talking about using stratis, are doing fine without blockchain. Sure, once adoption kicks in it'll go fast, but using unfinished and untested technology is a massive, massive risk. What if an unknown virus infects your smart contracts? What if something happens that we simply can't foresee because we don't understand whats happening well enough? It's like flying cars; sure, I believe they'll be around in 10, 15 years, but if elon musk offers me a working prototype, I'm not going to jump in and start pressing buttons.
You clearly don't understand Stratis,
What makes Stratis the SAFEST platform to use when using smart contracts is that it uses C# code. This is due to the fact that there are over 3 million C# developers and such a large pool means that it is very easy to audit the code.
If stratis smart contracts were a flying car, it would be a flying car which has a pool of 3 million engineers to look at its engine.