@Edent what's so bad about <div> ... or: Why do you want to avoid them?
-
Urgh. Very annoyed with @bitwarden
For obvious reasons, I want to move from the .com version to the .eu hosted version.
There's no "one-click" way to do it. Instead, there's lots of exporting data, creating new accounts, importing, deleting old ones.
That wouldn't be so bad, but I have a family plan and would have to do this for several people. That's going to be a logistical nightmare.
Why can't they offer an easy migration to paying customers?
@Edent @bitwarden same same same. They seem to be very under-resourced (or simply disorganised) when it comes to building these kind of features.
-
Urgh. Very annoyed with @bitwarden
For obvious reasons, I want to move from the .com version to the .eu hosted version.
There's no "one-click" way to do it. Instead, there's lots of exporting data, creating new accounts, importing, deleting old ones.
That wouldn't be so bad, but I have a family plan and would have to do this for several people. That's going to be a logistical nightmare.
Why can't they offer an easy migration to paying customers?
@Edent 1Password’s migration flow is publicly fairly similar in their documentation but I discovered and confirmed with support an easier way.
(Mainly I didn’t want either data unencrypted at rest, even on my own machine, and a specific data type required manual intervention.)
You can log into two accounts with the same client (app), and use the transfer credential between vaults to accomplish the migration between different domiciled accounts.
-
@Edent 1Password’s migration flow is publicly fairly similar in their documentation but I discovered and confirmed with support an easier way.
(Mainly I didn’t want either data unencrypted at rest, even on my own machine, and a specific data type required manual intervention.)
You can log into two accounts with the same client (app), and use the transfer credential between vaults to accomplish the migration between different domiciled accounts.
@Edent maybe that could work for you considering 1P and Bitwarden have an incredibly similar featureset.
That said, if companies are giving you data location choice, they should give you one click migration and replatforming. Especially in today’s world.
-
Huh, someone offering to bribe me to post their project to #HackerNews.
What do we reckon - should I ignore it or try to see who they're working for in order to expose them?
(Obviously I'm not going to take their cash.)
@Edent reminds me of this episode
-
Huh, someone offering to bribe me to post their project to #HackerNews.
What do we reckon - should I ignore it or try to see who they're working for in order to expose them?
(Obviously I'm not going to take their cash.)
@Edent $200 is nothing. Are they phishing for more vulnerable people they can exploit later maybe?
I'd say expose to HN and see who else has got the same phishing spam.
-
Huh, someone offering to bribe me to post their project to #HackerNews.
What do we reckon - should I ignore it or try to see who they're working for in order to expose them?
(Obviously I'm not going to take their cash.)
@Edent What would Miss Marple do?
-
> If not, anyone up for a beer and a bite to eat somewhere?
Quite possibly, yes - fingers crossed that the Eurostar is going to deliver me there, given the strike news.
-
@bart how easy do you find it to maintain?
@Edent @bart VaultWarden (in my case with podman on my own VPS) has been pretty non-problematic, upgrades are as smooth as pulling the freshest image and restarting the docker. (and I'm still not really good with docker & co.)
There's also vaultwarden.net, but I wish they said where they are hosted (as there are "sibling" projects with .us and .uk TLDs which are more obvious)
-
@Edent I also could join you, but probably for a beer later and talk about OSM
-
> If not, anyone up for a beer and a bite to eat somewhere?
Quite possibly, yes - fingers crossed that the Eurostar is going to deliver me there, given the strike news.