But if you are recalling them to enter them on your desktop, you obviously can view the info on your iPhone and enter it on your keyboard. This fact, in combination with the iPhone’s current inability to copy & paste if you have complex user names and passwords, means you will need to write them down and then hand enter them into mobile Safari. It can not auto populate log-in and password fields in the mobile version of Safari. That said, 1Password for the iPhone is a definitely a ‘scaled down’ iteration of the desktop version. Along with its primary function, the program has the ability to store other types of sensitive information (i.e., credit cards, bank accounts, social security numbers, etc.) as well. Agile Web Solution’s 1PasswordġPassword for the iPhone is an application that enables you to log user names and passwords for websites and securely save them on your iPhone. Once the data is on your iPhone/Touch, navigation through the various categories is quick and intuitive. Currently, SplashID is the only secure password/information keeper application that has both a PC and Mac desktop companion versions. The wireless sync process was easy and surprisingly quick. You will need to have the latest desktop version of the application ($20 or a free upgrade if you already have version 4). This article will be a comparative look at how SplashID, eWallet, and 1Password stack up against each other. That said, when the flood of new applications for the iPhone/ Touch hit iTunes, not only did I want to try SplashID but some of the other leading password managers as well. I will be up front about using SplashID since my early Palm days, through Windows Mobile (back to Palm) and now on my Blackberry. Plus the fact one must keep personal information secure with the constant threat of identity and cyber theft, I do not see how folks can live without a (mobile &/or desktop) program like these. It is the ONLY way I can keep track of all the electronic accessibility and critical information I need to keep with me 24/7. With the nearly endless number of usernames, passwords, web logins, bank accounts, credit card numbers, software licenses, and other sensitive/personal data everyone has to have these days to keep up in the digital age, I long ago turned towards a secure/encrypted password manager. If you buy something through the links on this page, we may earn a commission at no cost to you.
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