100%
My rule-of-thumb is that onboarding has to be *incredibly* easy; it's the front door of an application, the user's first substantial interactions. If it's not easy or streamlined, I start wondering how the rest of the UX is. And in this case, the front door muddied the carpet inside the doors of the software, and I couldn't figure out how to make the process easy for myself, as BW is feature-gapped in many places.
>Once you actually try to use BW in earnest, you'll find it's noticeably worse than 1PW in most ways. The most glaring is that it is meh at detecting login forms and poor at detecting new account signup. These are the 2 primary flows for a pw manager!
Yes, exactly. I'd argue that login form management is the single most important selling point of a password manager. I can roll my eyes, but deal with new account signup forms. But login forms with stellar autofill is what separates the wheat from the chaff, IMO.
>They've had quite long enough time already to do that. How long will you hold out hope?
Competition makes better product for all of us, I don't want to go back to the days of LastPass, So I'll cross my fingers for them, but won't return as a customer after this initial billing cycle.
>Anyway the primary use case I care about is sharing, not self-mgmt.
I'm the inverse; self-management is more important. The only sharing I need is with my partner, which we don't do much of, considering most important shared stuff has accounts for each of us. KeePass is simply for backup purposes, but I haven't decided one way or another where I'll land between them and Vault. I lean towards Vault (Full disclosure: I work for Hashicorp) mostly because I'm more familiar with the APIs than I am with KeePass's plugin/extension frameworks.