Hello,
I can say that I myself had some difficulties but two things really impressed me:
1. Very fast response times from Nicolas on the support team
2. Greenaddress's wallet is sleek and has a good UX experience
I have three laptops and each one had its own challenge:
1. windows 7 64 bit - I needed to install drivers and reboot the machine before the greenaddress app would recognize the wallet. Wasn't clear I needed a reboot
2. On my windows 8 machine it would recognize the wallet but it would also store my pin on the computer so it seemed like it didn't even need the card to access any funds until I went into settings to turn the pin remembering feature off.
3. On my windows 7 - 32 bit machine (company laptop) with some restrictive settings running the drivers never installed correctly.
My overall experience is tentatively positive but having spent many hours working with bitcoin technologies I can still say there is plenty I don't understand about this wallet:
1. The initial setup experience caused some confusion because I am not sure if I was able to get my mnemonic for backup done correctly. This is because greenaddress does not tell you its initializing with the hardware wallet BEFORE you create a new wallet and get your mnemonic.
There is no way to tell how the keys are generated. Are they generated by greenaddress and then written to the HW.1? Are they generated by the HW.1 and then the HW.1 tells greenaddress what the memonic should be? Since its unclear at what point the greenaddress wallet actually initializes with the HW.1 I can' figure this out.
2. The private keys are on the HW.1 but because the *quick login* feature can be active resulting in access to your wallet without needing to access HW.1 this must mean that greenaddress also stores these keys in some other location. How in the world was the greenaddress app able to open up the wallet with only a pin number when the *Quick login* - feature was selected? Where were the private keys stored if they were not stored on the wallet? Were they stored encrypted or unencrypted? If they were encrypted by only my pin number how strong could the encryption possibly be?
3. I'm still not sure that I believe this is better than 2 factor authentication using a cell phone. We already have seen that the greenaddress wallet has a habit of storing keys in some format (encrypted or unencrypted) on the computer anyways. If the keys are only encrypted using a weak pin then obviously blockchain.info's wallet is the better option.
4. I am familiar with handing paper wallets and loading actual private keys into software wallets. I am comfortable with adding / deleting private keys from a blockchain.info wallet to gain access to funds. I am not familiar with using a memonic to recover lost keys. There should be some videos to assist the consumer to learn more about this. I assume that this memonic is a feature of a Hierarchical Deterministic wallet but I'm not sure. So one memonic recovers all possible keys that could be generated by greenaddress / HW.1? Also what is the different / benefits between writing down an encrypted seed memonic and an unencrypted one? If greenaddress removes their app from the app store and I only have the memonic could I take and enter this into another wallet software to recover my private keys?
Also it would be really nice to have someone run a debugging program to isolate the type of communication taking place between the greenaddress wallet and the HW.1 to show us the following items:
1. Process of how private keys are generated - How is the mnemonic generated?
2. Showing how a request is inputted to the HW.1 and a signed transaction is outputted.
I'm not yet sold on this technology, I purchased it to learn about it. To convince me (and I am a pretty tech savvy consumer) that there is a benefit to using HW.1 there needs to be way more work done to educate the consumer as to the workings of this product.
~JD