Sui Community has partnered with Ika and launched programmable wallets by means of the novel DWalletCap system. DWalletCap transforms wallets into transferable programmable objects in contrast to conventional block chain wallets that use defunct non-public keys. This permits customers to train flexibility in administration of NFTs, DAOs and even cross-chain portfolios.
With an object-centered design and Mysticeti consensus, these programmable wallets take pleasure in sub-second finality as a consequence of Sui. The innovation brings completely totally different design patterns to possession and entry management of belongings in decentralized environments.
Safety and Scale Are Powered by 2PC -MPC Protocol
A signature entails the customers and the community. This method can develop to 1000’s of nodes, however the price of signing doesn’t improve with the variety of customers. With the zero-trust structure that Sui presents and excessive throughput, this protocol helps to make wallets extraordinarily decentralized, safe, and scalable with the standard methods.
Comparisons with Ethereum Wallets
Standard ethereum wallets rely upon both mounted keys or seed -phrase enabled HD wallets. They aren’t native programmable, or drivable by means of switch of possession. Though some have options, akin to sensible contract wallets or account abstraction, it’s not potential to have a full reimplementation of Sui object-level programmability.
DWalletCap makes wallets first-class. Programmable Sui wallets are extra adaptable and safer than peculiar Ethereum wallets on this regard. Programmable wallets of Sui allow multi chain asset administration alternatives, programmable NFTs and treasury administration of Dao. With DWalletCap, no conventional bridging permits the consumer to handle belongings akin to Bitcoin or Ethereum.
Ika community attains a fee of 10,000 transactions in a second supporting programmable custody and real-time dApps. The invention has the potential to rewrite the foundations of DeFi, multi‑chain possession and subsequent‑era pockets structure.

