

It would be nice if it remembered the backend “autofill setting” from the setting given it in the Chrome extension, but it does not. I briefly tested the Firefox browser extension and this also auto-fills passwords by URI. Linux appimage, CLI and various browser extensions are available. I’ve now had some more time to look around and Bit warden seems to have more potential than LastPass. Thank you for the link: I just made sure to upvote that. When tis feature is available I will be back. The Chrome and Firefox extensions just need an auto fill option that detects the URI and truly auto fills, like LastPass. Therefore with LastPass needing far less effort to use, I will be sticking with LastPass. Most of my form filling is on the laptop.Who wants to make 4 or so extra clicks to fill a form with Bit warden when LastPass does it all for you effortlessly Detecting the current URI and AutoFilling is an essential. on the laptop the LastPass Chrome browser extension has the more than essential full autofill feature, but the Bit warden Chrome extension does not.All the features are the same as LastPass, but a very beneficial shorter unlock PIN is available for Bit warden. on Android mobile Bit warden is better than Lastpass.So have today tried Bit warden, on both my Android mobile and Laptop Chrome browser having sucessfully imported all my LastPass data. So we are looking around for a change which is how I found Bit warden. LastPass users are currently dissatisfied that on March 1st 2021 they will be subjected to charging when using lastpass on more than one device type, eg mobile and laptop browser. It was great.Bit warden is currently missing a rare opportunity. Dashlane handled all the work for me no copy-pasting was required. I used it for a few days, and I never had to open the browser extension while browsing. It’s bordering on ridiculous how good Dashlane is at this. Pretty much any site you visit, you’ll either see Dashlane’s autofill notification appear near an entry field or the offer to save a new password. Overall, I was impressed with Dashlane in this regard. The other is how it helps you navigate the web by offering to remember passwords and auto-filling them as you go. However, this is only one part of what a password manager does. RELATED: Password Managers Compared: LastPass vs KeePass vs Dashlane vs 1Password Dashlane Autofill If you’re really into organizing your passwords just so, 1Password or Bitwarden may be a better choice. You can only pick from a pre-selected list of types (news, entertainment, tech, etc.), and there’s no way to filter according to type, at least not really. So far, so good, but I do have to say I’m less impressed with how Dashlane lets you categorize entries.
