Thanks for all replies! But I still don't understand why you would need a hardware wallet, unless you frequently send large amounts of bitcoin.
There's really nowhere to use bitcoin as of today (I have owned bitcoin for 5 months, and still haven't had any real world use). And even if I find someone accepting bitcoin, it's pretty useless because of fees?
I use bitcoin every month to pay my satellite TV bill to Dish TV.
I've book travel with expedia.com and paid with Bitcoin.
I've made purchases at both overstock.com and newegg.com and paid with bitcoins.
I've purchased pizza from a local pizza delivery place that accepts bitcoins.
I expect to use purse.io to make a purchase from Amazon.com using bitcoins before this month is over
There are literally thousands of places in the world that accept bitcoins. You clearly aren't looking.
Because of this, I do not consider bitcoin a currency, but rather an alternative for gold/saving, with some advantages.
And you are allowed to think that if you like. However, you should not expect that everybody else in the entire world thinks that same way.
So since I can't use it anywhere, I don't make transactions that often.
And I do.
The rest of my bitcoins I intend to hodl. They are currenctly on an exchange,
On an exchange? Well, that sounds like an absolutely horrible idea. Have you never heard of MtGox? I wouldn't expect anyone that makes such a poor decision to understand the need for a hardware wallet.
and I want to move them out of that exchange and hold for a year++ (unless hell breaks lose). So that's why I wonder if there's any point in buying a harware wallet for storage, since it would also need a paper backup... In other words, it isn't really safer to store.
And when you are done with your holding, and you want to exchange some of those bitcoins for your local currency... How do you plan to do that? I suspect that whatever method you plan to use, the hardware wallet would be a better option. Are you nervous at all that you might make a mistake trying to spend from that paper wallet when it is worth $10 million?
Am I correct in assuming that a hardware wallet is primarily useful for anyone who actually use bitcoin for transactions? Not hodling, and not micropayments?
The bitcoin blockchain is not good for micropayments regardless of the wallet you use.
Unless you plan to hold your bitcoins straight into your grave, you will need to access them eventually. Hardware wallet makes that access MUCH easier and MUCH safer than a paper wallet.