The irony of Watchtower in 1P is that it highlights just how many passwords are potentially compromised in a given time frame which only makes me more skeptical of the idea that I can happily rely upon cloud only infrastructure.
Even Remote Access apps have central management features for Enterprise customers who keep cloud infrastructure software to a minimum.
Strongbox TRIAL RUN!! I exported the couple hundred entries from my 1Password and imported them to the Strongbox app that I downloaded from the Mac App Store. Now Iām in position to run both apps side by side until I am confident of Strongbox and willing to accept its differences and limitations. Or my standalone license for 1Password7 stops working.
The export and import was picky. Spent a lot of time in the Numbers app looking at the CSV file for problems. Had to edit some fields in 1Password to get them to export right. And I had to tweak the CSV file itself before it would load okay. Seemed to be picky about number of columns and even āUrlā but not āURLā for column header? I think.
Experienced a crash and loss of items due to badly formatted input data. Once I had the CSV file cleaned up well enough, it stopped doing that. (And of course nothing Iām doing in Strongbox affects the data in 1Password, so Iām free to experiment all I want.)
Strongbox is a nice simple little Mac app compared to 1Password. It wonāt be for everyone. But it is a native Mac app, it does allow me to keep my data on my Mac, and it is even available for the non-subscription price of $23, which I have paid.
On import, it really only handled five fields: Title, Username, Password, Url, Notes (and also claimed an Email field but I had no such data). My credit card and other non-password records imported mostly empty of data.
Strongbox is probably not for you if you need family or company sharing. Sharing among devices is supposed to be possible any number of different ways. My next step will be to figure out the best way to get my Strongbox data from my Mac to my iPhone.
Youāre braver than I. I wouldāve imported it into KeePassXC first, and only then used the Mac version of Strongbox to use the resulting .kbdx file.
Also, the iOS version of Strongbox is really nice, so you should have no trouble with the last item.
If you follow that articleās procedure religiously it will help, but thereās nothing that will give you everything. Youāll simply have to keep 1P and the KeePass app-of-choice up together and manually add fields if you truly want everything. At least, that was my experience. YMMV.
Thanks, Iām okay with the basics and am willing to update Strongbox with some of the missing data manually if needed. I still have the1Password app for reference as well as a printout of all my data so I really shouldnāt lose anything.
Wow, I take back my MacPass recommendation for a KeePass client earlier. Strongbox free looks much betterāand the paid version seems to handle convenience better than MacPass plugins. Not to mention the iOS app for those who want it. I didnāt realize that Strongbox could store in the KeePass format.
Itās super annoying, honestly. It really really makes being a fan of Apple communities hard.
Iāve tried to refrain from calling this community elitist but itās becoming clearer and clearer to me that thatās exactly the word to describe it.
When you get your first Apple silicon-based laptop Mac (M1 or whatever) and you start watching the energy and memory usage in Activity Monitor of various apps and how good ones contribute to excellent battery life, you may come to realize how a good native Mac app could stand head and shoulders above other ways of doing things.
You guys realize the 1Password Mac application isnāt actually running the entire time, right? The browser extension does the job of filling in passwords and creating new ones - you only need to open the app once in a while for certain tasks.