Today, Trezor just announced a new hardware wallet (Trezor Safe 3) that seems to be quite competitively priced.. ... They are accepting orders, and it is supposed to start to ship in mid-November.
https://trezor.io/trezor-safe-3I still have some troubles understanding how a hardware wallet with a secure element could be open source. If anyone can explain or even point to some sources, that would be something that I would be interested in hearing a bit more about how that can be done.
That's a good question and should be answerable by anyone that decides to trust a hardware wallet and if they cant then they are doing it wrong.
Another good question is why a server at ledger headquarters failing under load stops ledger users from being able to transact.
https://twitter.com/P3b7_/status/1590578730702761984?ref_src=twsrc%5EtfwHere is a good read that explains alot of fundamentals in an easy to digest manner.
https://bitbox.swiss/blog/best-of-both-worlds-using-a-secure-chip-with-open-source-firmware/One thing I have noticed when doing this type research in the past is I don't like any company that forces the use of javascript on their site yet pro-ports to sell you a security device for your life savings.