Let us know what your battery is like after a few days. Bought one when they launched and the battery would die within a day or so of it sitting on a desk (even though it was completely off). This phantom battery drain was the biggest hassle with this device so I’m not using it anymore.
@@MikeMike-qd8bf smaller than a credit card and with but thicker. Haven’t really checked out the battery life since I use mine at home plugged in most of the time. From their support page: help.onekey.so/hc/en-us/articles/360002871895-Lifespan-and-usage-guidelines-for-OneKey-hardware-wallets#h_01J416G18VVMDZ04XCB5BNYBH6
What if I am trying to send XRP,(not on the list) and it requires XRP TAG? What is a Destination Tag/Memo? It indicates that it required XRP TAG otherwise the crypto might be lost? How do I verify correct TAG and how to add the TAG?
Hey CryptoDad, as always thank you for the informative video. Lots of information. Unfortunately for me the biggest turn-off of the OneKey, like Ngrave or so many other hardware wallets is the fact that their country of origin and manufacturing is CHINA. We have all seen far too often that China is NOTORIOUS for embedding spyware and traceware into many electronic systems they make. With everything being capable from GPU boards all the way to most recent was a crane used in US ports with a Chinese built in backdoor. Let's just hope that someone from a non-adversarial country can develop something like this or hopefully even better. Thank you again.
Hey, I hear you. First off, I'll mention that China is not our enemy. We are not at war with them. We still trade with them. So they would more reasonably be looked upon as our rivals. But if any one is NOTORIOUS for spyware, tracewear, and constant surveillance, it is the US along with its five-eyes allies. So really we're not safe anywhere. So the two largest hardware wallet companies are Ledger and Trezor based in France and the Czech Republic respectively. I believe Coldcard is based in Canada. I don't know of any large US based companies that are making crypto hardware wallets, although I've heard there are one or two US based brands. Most crypto hardware wallets employ secure element chips. And most of those are made in Taiwan, so go figure. Keystone Pro 3s are made in Hong Kong, which is sort of China. Secure element chips undergo rigorous testing. But I'm not sure where these testing agencies are based either. I believe Europe. (EAL 5+ EAL 6+) The best thing we can do is trust in the process. Companies all over the world are making crypto hardware wallets that are presumably tested by 3rd party organizations. They have a self interest to make wallets that work, so to speak. I haven't heard any news stories about any wallets being mysteriously drained. Any hardware wallet on the market requires some level of trust on the part of the user. So it's basically up to you to decide how to minimize that trust. It's either that or start doing elliptic curve cryptography yourself with a pencil and a paper. And I would much rather trust a company that specializes in crypto hardware wallets than my own self.
What is the point of something that looks and feels like a phone? I mean WTF how many devices like this is a person going to have to store all over the place for their crypto? NO no no. If the hardware wallet is bigger than something like a Nano, then you may as well save yourself the space, get a Tangem card and use your phone. Makes no sense using a device with such a large screen when you can just use your phone with a Tangem card or similar. Next they will be designing a crypto hardware wallet this size of an iPad. Just ridiculous!
Hi, is it also possible to use a ledger nano with the onekey app? As an alternative to ledger live? Thank you!
Amazing and space efficient box. Mahalos Rex.
@@IdentifyAsMu Ha! I skipped the part where I pulled out all the swag. My videos are just getting too long.
Let us know what your battery is like after a few days. Bought one when they launched and the battery would die within a day or so of it sitting on a desk (even though it was completely off). This phantom battery drain was the biggest hassle with this device so I’m not using it anymore.
Just bought mine today. Do you have a video about UTXOS ?
A size comparison with a creditcard would be nice, also weight, and batterylife Information would be nice, Thank you! 👍
@@MikeMike-qd8bf smaller than a credit card and with but thicker. Haven’t really checked out the battery life since I use mine at home plugged in most of the time. From their support page: help.onekey.so/hc/en-us/articles/360002871895-Lifespan-and-usage-guidelines-for-OneKey-hardware-wallets#h_01J416G18VVMDZ04XCB5BNYBH6
What if I am trying to send XRP,(not on the list) and it requires XRP TAG? What is a Destination Tag/Memo? It indicates that it required XRP TAG otherwise the crypto might be lost? How do I verify correct TAG and how to add the TAG?
How to Transfer XRP Using Destination Tags: ua-cam.com/video/FrhIvHJ7Oqs/v-deo.html
Does battery last long?
Hi, how to send SUI crypto to ledger wallet could you show that
Quick question, when your sending coins to cold wallet you said “authenticate” . Does Coinbase send you a text message to authenticate?
This is much better value than what Ledger can bring to the table, or is it just me?
A big comparison test would be nice
Ledger is a joke compared to this. Complete ripoff what ledger gives you for the money.
Buy the onekey pro with fake battery. Ledger has better battery than onekey pro
WhatsApp about the battery issue?
No ICP ! Whyyyy ??? 😭
Hey CryptoDad, as always thank you for the informative video. Lots of information. Unfortunately for me the biggest turn-off of the OneKey, like Ngrave or so many other hardware wallets is the fact that their country of origin and manufacturing is CHINA. We have all seen far too often that China is NOTORIOUS for embedding spyware and traceware into many electronic systems they make. With everything being capable from GPU boards all the way to most recent was a crane used in US ports with a Chinese built in backdoor. Let's just hope that someone from a non-adversarial country can develop something like this or hopefully even better. Thank you again.
Hey, I hear you. First off, I'll mention that China is not our enemy. We are not at war with them. We still trade with them. So they would more reasonably be looked upon as our rivals. But if any one is NOTORIOUS for spyware, tracewear, and constant surveillance, it is the US along with its five-eyes allies. So really we're not safe anywhere. So the two largest hardware wallet companies are Ledger and Trezor based in France and the Czech Republic respectively. I believe Coldcard is based in Canada. I don't know of any large US based companies that are making crypto hardware wallets, although I've heard there are one or two US based brands. Most crypto hardware wallets employ secure element chips. And most of those are made in Taiwan, so go figure. Keystone Pro 3s are made in Hong Kong, which is sort of China. Secure element chips undergo rigorous testing. But I'm not sure where these testing agencies are based either. I believe Europe. (EAL 5+ EAL 6+) The best thing we can do is trust in the process. Companies all over the world are making crypto hardware wallets that are presumably tested by 3rd party organizations. They have a self interest to make wallets that work, so to speak. I haven't heard any news stories about any wallets being mysteriously drained. Any hardware wallet on the market requires some level of trust on the part of the user. So it's basically up to you to decide how to minimize that trust. It's either that or start doing elliptic curve cryptography yourself with a pencil and a paper. And I would much rather trust a company that specializes in crypto hardware wallets than my own self.
Onekey if from HK controlled by china. Avoid not secure
$278 ? Seriously? That's outrageous. No thanks, I'll stick with my Ledgers and Tangens (3 cards for $69) but thanks for the helpful video 😅
What is the point of something that looks and feels like a phone? I mean WTF how many devices like this is a person going to have to store all over the place for their crypto? NO no no. If the hardware wallet is bigger than something like a Nano, then you may as well save yourself the space, get a Tangem card and use your phone. Makes no sense using a device with such a large screen when you can just use your phone with a Tangem card or similar.
Next they will be designing a crypto hardware wallet this size of an iPad. Just ridiculous!