![]() The product, which is currently in beta and will eventually cost around $5 a month for each user on a team, comes with a few additional perks, such as free access to the professional edition of every version of 1Password, and support for unlimited vaults and storage. Not a big problem if you can use 1Password to both store and automatically fill web forms with them, but definitely less user-friendly if you had to either remember them in your head or type them in by hand. While undoubtedly safe from a mathematical perspective, these tended to be… a little hard to use. In the past, this has meant having to deal with really complex sequences of letters and digits like, say, Fmr7M6JwWp. ![]() This nifty feature allows you to create cryptographically-secure passwords based on random data. The new password generator can now use words instead of random characters. The lack of flashy UI changes means that the meat of 1Password’s new release lies under its skin, starting with the app’s password generator. This last change, in particular, makes the process of adding new logins to your digital vault more obvious, thus reducing the likelihood that you will forget to save a set of credentials. For example, the app now features a redesigned set up workflow, and a new Save Login window now pops up in your browser when you register on a website. ![]() That’s not to say, of course, that a few tweaks haven’t found their way into 1Password 6. Thus, new users will enjoy a mature experience that has been refined over time, while veterans of AgileBits’s software won’t have to do away with their familiarity and learn how to use the app all over. 1Password has had its share of those in the past, but I happen to think that the current interface works really well. It’s certainly trendy for apps to undergo drastic UI redesigns with every major release. At the cost of sounding old and crotchety, I must say that this is good news.
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