Hardware wallet manufacturer Trezor has confirmed it will deliver its first batch of wallets next month, following a successful crowdfunding campaign that began in June.
Trezor had previously promised to deliver its first orders in October, but delayed the fulfillment date to January after deciding to add more features.
Pavol Rusnak, Trezorâs co-founder, revealed that pre-orders are now closed.
Rusnak and co-founder Marek Palatinus initially attempted to fund the development of their hardware wallet with a Kickstarter campaign. However, the duo abandoned the crowdfunding platform after âlong delays in communicationâ with Kickstarter and âadditional conditionsâ imposed on the projectâs page, according to a Trezor blog post.
Instead, the pair decided to solicit funds from the bitcoin community directly, via posting on reddit and other community sites.
On 21st November, a Trezor blog post announced that âmost of the initial costsâ had been covered by âhundreds of enthusiastsâ. Rusnak wouldnât give an exact figure on how much has been raised, nor how many people have contributed; adding only that the amount was âenough to cover mass production costsâ.
Trezor offered bitcoin enthusiasts two ways of supporting its crowdfunding campaign. Supporters could either pay 1 BTC for a standard Trezor unit with a plastic casing, or pay triple the price for the aluminium-clad metallic option.
As bitcoinâs value has soared in the past two months, users have begun to question the wisdom of Trezor pricing its pre-orders in the cryptocurrency.
According to Mt Gox, a Trezor pre-order was worth, on average, $100 (US dollars) during the deviceâs crowdfunding campaign period. However, bitcoinâs value began to climb steeply in mid-October.
By the end of November, 1 BTC was worth around $1,100 (or more than 10 times the initial value) according to the CoinDesk BPI. Thus, a Trezor pre-order would cost either $1,100 or $3,300.
As a result, some redditors have expressed their discontent with Trezorâs price. One user, for example, posted:
âIt was expensive then and itâs f***ing over-priced now. [Trezor] should honestly give back some of the bitcoin to the people that gave them funding so early on.â
Another redditor posted:
âThe decision to have a fixed price [â¦] was a mistake because of the huge price changes in the value of a bitcoin.â
In response, Rusnak dismissed these comments as âmisguidedâ. When asked if he regretted setting pre-order prices at a flat bitcoin-denominated value, he replied: âNo.â
Trezor previously stated that it would price its pre-orders in bitcoin to support the bitcoin economy. He added: âYou donât see people complaining on Kickstarter that they want their money back with interest.â
Rusnak also said that his firmâs decision to end the crowdfunding campaign came in response to complaints about Trezorâs price. He added:
âWe decided to stop [the crowdfunding campaign] in order to stop meaningless discussions about the Trezor pricing.â
Rusnak added that âalmost allâ the currency his firm collected from crowdfunding was âimmediatelyâ changed to fiat currency to pay for production costs.
Trezor is the latest nascent hardware wallet designed for the bitcoin community. However, as it stands, hardware wallets are not in common use.
One benefit of a hardware wallet is the fact that it isnât connected to the internet, thus greatly reducing its exposure to potential malefactors.
Redditors have suggested the YubiKey Neo as Trezorâs best alternative. The YubiKey Neo is a contactless authentication key which redditors claim can be programmed to offer the same functionality as Trezor.
Rusnak and Palatinus also run several other well-known bitcoin projects. Rusnak started CoinMap, a crowdsourced map of real-world merchants who accept bitcoin payments.
Palatinus runs Slushâs Pool, a bitcoin mining âpoolâ that lets users work together to mine bitcoins and distribute the proceeds among themselves.
Rusnak said that he and Palatinus are in the process of forming a new company, SatoshiLabs, that will act as an umbrella organisation for all their bitcoin projects, including Trezor, Slushâs Pool and CoinMap.
SatoshiLabs would also offer consulting services, Rusnak said.