

- #Chrome extensions remembear install#
- #Chrome extensions remembear password#
- #Chrome extensions remembear mac#

Maybe later I’ll try one of the true open source options like KeepAssXXX (I may have spelled that wrong).
#Chrome extensions remembear password#
I’m growing tired of installing and testing password managers. Are some of them possibly not security breaches depending on your PR department’s definition of a breach? Perhaps. Remember when I said that a bad UI/UX makes me wonder if they paid attention to details like encryption and security? Well, LastPass doesn’t give me confidence.Īre some of those old? Yes.
#Chrome extensions remembear install#
I was able to install the desktop app, but it is deprecated, which puts Dashlane out of contention for me and my family. It was okay as a 1Password replacement but they seem to be in some kind of transition between feature sets and user interfaces, as some of the documentation I found mentioned features that changed names or were not available in the desktop app.
#Chrome extensions remembear mac#
I get the feeling it’s the second-biggest player in the Mac market, after 1Password. Dashlaneĭashlane is another well-known password manager. NordPass passes this test, but switching from 1Password feels like a lateral move, and 1Password is more widely used, supported, and likely to continue to be supported going forward. Sorry if I’m not going into much detail here, but at this point a basic UI for storing multiple item types is table stakes. I had a hard time getting its browser plugin to work in Safari (eventually I got it to work), and I could not get it working in Orion. Although it’s an Electron app, it’s very well designed and feels mostly native. Like Remembear, this is a password manager from a VPN company. It’s also expensive (but the pricing would be fine if it was for a family plan).

I couldn’t get the browser extension to work in Orion. But it looked like so much fun that I had to try it. It doesn’t offer a family plan, so it isn’t a true option for me. The UI is native, thoughtful, and friendly. The grizzly bear graphics and puns are cute and polished. This is the polar 🐻❄️ opposite of Bitwarden in terms of UI/UX. You can’t judge a book by its cover, but with so little attention paid to UI/UX details, it makes me wonder how much attention they paid to details like encryption and security. I like that it doesn’t try to autosubmit forms, but I couldn’t get it to copy one-time codes to the clipboard.Ī major drawback is that you can’t set up one-time passwords from the desktop app, only from the mobile app.īitwarden is acceptable, but I would be annoyed by the bad UI/UX and have a nagging worry about how safe it is. The browser extension mostly works, including in Orion. It can store multiple entry types including logins, credit cards, and secure notes. They have a family sharing plan and good pricing. You know the deal: a programmer-designed web site bundled as an Electron app.įeature-wise, it’s got it all. We’re talking CAPTCHAs to login to the desktop app modal dialog boxes that have to be scrolled to get to the buttons at the bottom low-effort implementation, like an import feature that doesn’t detect duplicates and so on. The app is very functional, but the UI/UX is janky. Bitwardenīitwarden is one of those open source projects that turned into a company. Simple, right? These are my notes as I’ve tried various competitors.

And, the killer feature: it runs extensions built for Chrome or Firefox. Instead it uses WebKit, the same browser engine as Safari, with many of the same privacy protections. What makes this browser unique is that it isn’t a reskinned version of Chrome/Chromium.
