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559

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[–] 2 pts

Coinomi works pretty fine and supports more than 1,770 blockchain assets.

https://www.coinomi.com/en/

[–] 2 pts

If you practice good OPSEC, you can use any wallet. A PC that you do not use for ANYTHING ELSE is the best option. Phones are too easily comprised and should only be used for two factor authentication purposes. Hardware wallets are nice because they provide a layer of security that a phone or PC cannot easily match.

[–] 1 pt

Air gapped would be ideal. Or at least a PC you do not put on the Internet. For your cold storage. You have to move stuff online to trade, obviously.

[–] 0 pt

Hence the emphasis on only using the PC for transactions and nothing else. Don't network it with other PCs. A 4G hotspot would be beneficial for keeping it off any shared network.

[–] 0 pt

Yeah I hadn't thought of that but 4G is encrypted and is probably reasonably more secure than your home Internet

[–] 1 pt

There are many, do some research. I agree coinomi is a pretty good wallet app for phone. Easy to use, no ads. Some complain that it is not completely open source, but it seems quite secure, full featured, and is multi-coin. For storage of appreciable amounts of assets though, you should definitely not use a phone app. Purchase an external hardware wallet such as Trezor or Ledger.

[–] 0 pt

I'm a casual when it comes to crypto. Is an app good enough for buying a few coins, sitting back, and enjoying the ride?

[–] 1 pt (edited )

Sure, yeah... go ahead and try Coinomi it's among the easiest for beginners.

Is an app good enough for buying a few coins,

lol "a few coins" lol. If it is BTC, each full "coin" is about $60000. ...I know what you mean to say, though.

[–] 0 pt

Coinomi didn't have Shiba Inu. I just threw a $100 at it in Coinbase and now have 1,419,436.34182866 Shiba coins.

By a few I meant a variety of coin types.

I use various exchanges and soft wallets depending on coin, but ultimately I think all your assets should be stored into a hard wallet. I like the Ledger Nano series.

[–] 1 pt

It's totally fucking impossible to tell. There's a new wallet out every week. It also depends on what you want to do with it.

[–] 1 pt

for hardware wallets I would recommend Trezor.

I like Monero crypto the best, and the only two hardware wallets compatible with that are ledger and trezor.

But ledger openly braggs about it's diverse workforce, so if you don't want to give money to a woke company, Trezor would be best bet. Ledger is cheapest option, and I have no experience using Trezor, that's my recommendation.

[–] 0 pt

That depends on your device and OS. There are tons of them out there. You want one that is secure.