![]() ![]() ![]() The only caveat about Bitwarden (which applies to most of the password managers, we chose a replacement carefully) is that as it’s a US-based company it’s liable to the Patriot act and subsequent privacy-destroying legislation. All the browser extensions work well, the sync works perfectly. I have a team of twenty-five people on Bitwarden and we have literally zero issues with the product/service. The other point is that there are reasonably priced alternatives which work just as well or better than 1password. My point is that the standalone license (which 1password desperately try to hide and avoid selling) can actually be useful, for those of us who are legacy 1password users. I still use perpetual license 1Password 6 very actively with local sync (literally, with my flash drive, it’s automatic) for material I don’t want in the cloud (banking, credit card info, etc).Īnd, as you’ve said, 1PW for families probably is reasonably priced.ġpassword has chosen to abuse its users. It’s a pity as once upon a time they were one of the good guys when they were a growing and not greedy company. Since my family in this case would be two people (the under contingent don’t have their own password vaults) that plan is not particularly good value.ġpassword is one of the companies who has used subscription and cloud services as a way to really fleece their customers. The only decent value in cloud version from 1password is the family account at $5/month but that pricing has not been steady in my opinion. All of this is much more attractive than 1password’s extortionate $8/month per user for teams (four times more expensive: 1password basic business is not nearly as powerful as Bitwarden’s teams version, no groups for instance) or even $36/year for personal account. There’s even an enterprise version at $3/month which allow on-premise hosting. Cloud sharing of passwords we use Bitwarden which is $12/year for personal use and $2/month per user for teams. I block 1PasswordMini and don’t use any of the 1Password cloud features. Even on Mojave here (one multimedia computer out of five work computers I personally use) I have Safari 12.1.2. Safari 13 doesn’t affect users before High Sierra or Mojave. ![]() ($64.99 standalone app from AgileBits or the Mac App Store or a $2.99- or $4.99-per-month subscription ( TidBITS members receive 6 months free), free update, 50.8 MB, release notes, macOS 10.12.6+) The password manager adds support for Voice Control in macOS 10.15 Catalina, snaps the 1Password mini window to the center of the screen when dragged near the center (and reattaches to the 1Password icon in the menu bar when dragged near it), remembers whether you last viewed the category list or the vault list in the sidebar on launch, alphabetizes the duplicate passwords pop-up menu, immediately updates the item list when dragging items to other vaults, resolves an issue where 1Password failed to remove cached files after deleting an item, fixes a bug that prevented the “Compromised Websites” Watchtower service from being enabled from the main window, and addresses a multitude of crashes. #1631: iOS 16.0.3 and watchOS 9.0.2, roller coasters trigger Crash Detection, Medications in iOS 16, watchOS 9 Low Power ModeĪgileBits has issued 1Password 7.4, a maintenance release with a variety of improvements and a healthy dose of bug fixes.#1632: Apple Card Savings accounts, SOS in the iPhone status bar, Tab Wrangler, Focus in iOS 16.#1633: macOS 13 Ventura and other OS updates, 10th-gen iPad, M2 iPad Pro, 3rd-gen Apple TV 4K, Apple services price hikes.#1634: New Messages features, Apple Q4 2022 results, Preview drops PostScript, iOS/iPadOS 15.7.1, Dvorak on iPhone and iPad.#1635: Adobe/Pantone quarrel, does Matter matter yet?, OneWorld 65W international charger, corral your email with SaneBox, e3 Software sponsoring TidBITS. ![]()
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