After spending some time setting up various teams and roles, you need only add users as appropriate. Initial administrative setup will obviously take longer, but much thought has gone into streamlining this process, with multiple methods for bulk-importing users, like email auto-provisioning based on domain name, SSO, or API/SDK. Most users will have themselves up and running in a matter of minutes. Mass distribution is made easier thanks to command-line installation on Windows), while desktop and mobile apps and browser extensions are very easy to install. It’s clear that Keeper’s developers put a lot of thought into its business products. There’s also the five-user Family Plan available for $6.25 / £6 / AUD$9 a month and has five private vaults. As with the business plan, you can pay extra for different modules – in this case secure file storage and the BreachWatch alerting system. why not? Data points welcome if you've tried (or use) this.For individuals, meanwhile, the Keeper Personal plan is available for just $2.92 / £3 / AUD$5 a month which supports unlimited passwords on an unlimited number of devices for an individual user. However, if you love the application and use it on all devices and all your platforms for your personal and secret information and media, then. It's a trial version, which is good, but it's quite expensive after the trial, at £19 or so per year. Plus the app takes a good eleven seconds to open after logging in (via PIN or fingerprint). In terms of my limited testing, I couldn't see a way to import data from other secure databases, plus I didn't like the constant delays as each entry change seemed to go up to the cloud, along with a 'toast' notification (and no way to turn this off, that I could see). See also the Desktop promo screenshot below: (right) Good to see Windows Hello supported - and it does work, a tap on a fingerprint reader or a scan of irises and you're into Keeper. Adding to the confusion, the '>' isn't a control leading to other settings and, in fact, does nothing at all. Each record is synced with the cloud in real time, but presumably this extra sync involves some 'push' to other devices. Maybe I should have tried a light theme, to see if the hamburger menu turns dark?(!!) The Settings menu, with handy clipboard expiration, so that you don't accidentally paste a password into another application later on (right) some of the themes available. Which is odd.Ĭreating a new secure record and (right) looking at the overview of my test 'data vault', with three folders of records, plus two top level records. The main hamburger navigation menu - curiously bright despite the overall chosen dark theme! (right) I liked the way folders can be assigned a custom colour, though this colour is hardly used thereafter in the UI. Getting started with Keeper - stylish and helpful dialogs lead you through the sign-up (for the month long trial). Here's Keeper in action on my IDOL 4 Pro: The UI works just fine on Mobile, even though it's perhaps best on the Desktop, with a larger multi-pane layout. We've seen this sort of thing before, of course, though Keeper has had a lot of TLC lavished on it, cosmetically.
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