India has a device problem. 330 million smartphones are sold every year. Tens of millions of laptops, tablets, consoles, and cameras. And an upgrade cycle that keeps accelerating.
Most of these devices don’t die — they get replaced. The old phone goes into a drawer. The laptop gets wiped and forgotten. Eventually, it becomes e-waste.
TritZaar is our answer: India’s first circular device marketplace for used consumer electronics.
What TritZaar Does
TritZaar lets users buy, sell, rent, and share used consumer electronics across eight device categories: smartphones, laptops, gaming consoles, VR headsets, cameras, audio equipment, smart home devices, and wearables.
We launched with three cities — Chennai, Bengaluru, and Mumbai — and we’re expanding fast. Every transaction on TritZaar keeps a device in circulation rather than in a landfill.
Key features:
- Razorpay escrow payments hold funds until the buyer confirms receipt
- Standardized condition grading (New, Like New, Good, Fair)
- Rental listings for devices you only need temporarily
- Community sharing for gear you own but rarely use
The Connection to Ternary Computing
TritZaar isn’t a detour from our mission — it is the mission, phase one.
Building the world’s first ternary computer requires years of research, hardware development, and silicon fabrication. None of that is cheap. TritZaar generates revenue that funds the Aum team, simulator development, and processor research.
We’re taking a page from the playbook of every great hardware company: build software products that generate cash flow, use that cash flow to fund hardware R&D, ship the hardware that changes the industry.
TritZaar is profitable today. That profit funds tomorrow’s T1 processor.
What’s Next
We’re rolling out seller verification and reputation systems over Q2 2026. A mobile app for TritZaar is in early development — built with React Native and using the same design language as our web platform.
If you’re in Chennai, Bengaluru, or Mumbai and have a device gathering dust, visit TritZaar and give it a second life.