What's the most user friendly hardware wallet?
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Replies (7)
Bitkey is coming 👀
They don't ship to where I want it to be yet It was my first choice.
Tough question as you would first have to define what constitutes a hardware wallet.
I would argue that a hardware wallet needs to let the user add entropy at key creation, ideally supporting dice ware, allow writing down a backup (which requires a screen), use open standards so experts can verify if the entropy also gets used according to these standards, it needs to be able to display transactions for confirmation on the device and it needs to follow standards again to avoid key exfiltration.
If you settle for anything less, you might be paying for hardware that still is vulnerable to a rug pull by a compromised provider.
Agreed with every word. I wanted it simpler though for friends who don't hold much and new to this.
What a friend are you? Friends don't let friends use rugable toys. Give them Phoenix or some other high quality mobile wallet for small amounts and set a timer to remind them to move funds to a real hardware wallet once Bitcoin goes x10 again.
Well ... depends on how low these friends want to go with their stack. When they want to start with $1 or so, I occasionally even point them to custodial wallets as it makes no sense to pay $5 to get started with $1. But LN is just more fun to add more sats to the stack than with on-chain.
Same for me, but I'm thinking of using a shipment collector company to ship it to my country because it's not supported yet.