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root 13f6295a…73db · depth 3 · · selected 40a7177d…aa9e

90eb2036…3150 -- 381d [parent] 
|    I look at reviews and guides like BTC sessions. Watch them carefully and see if the wallet does what I want it
|    to do.
|    
|    Then I check popular forums like stacker.news, Twitter, and nostr, and you can now use AI tools, to see what
|    people say about the product in general. Try to find any problems or complaints.
|    
|    You can also use an AI tool to help you look at a projects GitHub page, look at the open issues, ask your AI
|    things like “what are developers working on?” “Any unresolved issues?”
|    
|    This way you can use a sort of “web of trust” to review the code and products you decide to use, even as someone
|    who cannot read code themselves.
|    
|    
|    For example I can start you off with a few products:
|    
|    Hardware:
|    Coldcard
|    Blockstream Jade
|    
|    Software:
|    Sparrow wallet (desktop)
|    Nunchuk wallet (mobile)
|    
|    Software wallets for spending:
|    Aqua wallet
|    
|    
|    🔥🧡 good luck!
|    reply [1 reply]
Sasmora -- 381d
Thank you so much for this response! Okay, this is exactly my point about an idea I have.

What you describe is what I think most knowledgeable users do, but I feel like it creates a gap for less
experienced users, who are looking for shortcuts.

What if there was a page where you could objectively compare the features of many different wallets at the same
time? Would you use it?

In fact, this could even help with smaller wallet projects that may not be as well-known, but whose features
would make them excellent options.
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