Ledger Stax Hands-On Review: A Hardware Wallet With iPod Design Thrives

Ledger Stax Hands On Review A Hardware Wallet With iPod Design Flourishes

Most hardware wallets for crypto work. They look like USB sticks, remote car key fobs, and pocket calculators, but they can steal a lot of money.

Ledger, a French company that makes hardware wallets, wants to change this with the Stax, a sleek device that looks like an iPhone.

Smart move

Ledger Stax Hands-On Review A Hardware Wallet With iPod Design Thrives

No other hardware wallet is like the Ledger Stax. Tony Fadell, who designed the iPod, was hired by Ledger to make a sleek device with new features like the first curved E Ink display.

Ledger wants the Stax to be a nice-looking thing that shows off nice-looking assets like NFTs. The battery level and device name are shown on the thin face of the curved screen. The aluminum and polycarbonate back of the device has a new logo for Ledger.

Ledger wants the Stax to be a nice-looking thing that shows off nice-looking assets like NFTs. The battery level and device name are shown on the thin face of the curved screen. The device is made of aluminum and polycarbonate, and on the back is Ledger’s new logo.

On the bottom of the device is a sleep button and a USB-C port. The Stax is wirelessly charged and can talk to other devices through Bluetooth and NFC (near-field communication, the same technology employed by credit card chips).

The Stax is 85mm by 54mm, which is the same size as a credit card, but at 6mm thick, it won’t fit in a wallet. We were surprised by how light it was. If it had been a bit bigger, it might have been easier to sell as a luxury item.

With the Stax, you can stack wallets like books and write your name on the “spine.” At $279 each, even a multimillionaire Bored Ape collector who likes to show off their collection would be better off buying a single Stax and a Nano S Plus as a backup.

Overtax

Ledger Stax Hands-On Review A Hardware Wallet With iPod Design Thrives

Most of Stax is controlled by Ledger Live.

The Ledger Stax needs to be paired with a smartphone via Bluetooth. You set up the transaction in Ledger Live to send Bitcoin, Ethereum, or another cryptocurrency before you sign it. Before, you had to press two buttons to sign on a Ledger. Now, you just have to press the E Ink screen for a long time.

E-ink screens show your wallet’s QR code, which makes it easy to buy things.

On the screen of the Stax, Ledger Live showed how to set up an NFT. To see your NFT collection, touch “lock screen photo.” To make your picture stand out, click on your NFT and change the contrast.

It looks nice and is easy to use, but people who are new to crypto will still need to learn about wallet addresses and how to sign transactions.

People who care about security will keep arguing about Bluetooth in the meantime. Even if your private keys never leave the safe part of the device, Ledger says that some users might not like the wireless protocol.

The wallet is a big step forward in industrial design, but it is missing one important feature. Since NFTs are often animated and colored, black-and-white E Ink won’t work.

Content Source: decrypt.co

The post Ledger Stax Hands-On Review: A Hardware Wallet With iPod Design Thrives appeared first on NFT News Pro.



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