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10 sats \ 4 replies \ @kepford 23h \ on: Should I get a cold card? bitcoin
I really like the Sparrow guide on when to get a hardware device.
https://sparrowwallet.com/docs/best-practices.html#how-much-are-you-storing
I would for sure run a node first. You can likely do this without spending any sats. If it were me I'd do that. Then set up Sparrow and then set up the bitcoin only firmware @k00b mentioned on the trezor unless you just want new hardware. Cordcard seems better if you can afford the sats though. That said you can use your existing device as a signer for multi-sig if you decided to do that in the future.
how can i run a node without spending sats? i was planning on getting something cheap , just dedicated to being a node. my old computer is sadly too shit
that sparrow guide was very good though, it's convinced me i should just go node first instead of an extra cold storage
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I've been able to run a node on an old Thinkpad x230. I don't know how shit your old computer is but you may still be able to do it.
If it's disk space that's keeping you back, just prune. People say it's bad, but I don't think it's that much of a trade-off (you still verify everything), and it's a lot better than not running a node at all.
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it's so bad that i once it's on, it's just unusable and frozen all the time etc
even getting a browser going is hard work
i figure better get something new and dedicated to only being a node
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I'm guessing you aren't running Linux.
A good cheap way to run a node is on an old laptop with Linux or a 1 liter PC by Dell or Lenovo. I have bought a few on eBay and put new SSDs in them. They make great nodes. Low power use and small. You can install Umbrel or StartOS
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