
I love BitWarden…when the new Windows ‘Edge Extensions’ came out…it was (1) of the 1st PWM ext(s) available…I tried a few of them out, but found BitWarden worked across all my OS/iOS Platforms seamlessly. I’m really glad BitWarden is adding a ‘Desktop App’ of it software. TunnelBear makers launch password manager RememBear.KeePassXC: cross-platform KeePass client.How web trackers exploit password managers.Things may be different if you use a self-hosted version but the extensions seem more comfortable to use right now, and the web-version offers what the desktop version offers. I don't see much reason to use the desktop version of Bitwarden if you use browser extensions, apps or the web-version already. My favorite password manager, KeePass, is a standalone desktop program as well, but it does support a global shortcut to sign in to sites and supports extensions and add-ons to extend its functionality.

They don't seem to be intended as the main app that users of the service work with as they lack browser integration or auto-fill options.

Closing Wordsīitwarden's desktop applications work reasonably well. The option to create domain rules, associate multiple domain names with each other, is also missing in the desktop version. I could not locate import and export options, nor options to deauthorize sessions or purge the vault. The desktop app lacks some features that the web-based version of Bitwarden offers. You may use the password generator to generate new passwords based on parameters such as length and the use of characters, use folders for better separation of accounts, or access the password generation history. The password manager includes a handful of additional options.

The family price is reasonable, however, as you get a self-hosting option and 1 Gigabyte of storage for attachments for $1 per month. Notes and file attachments are listed as well if they do exist the latter is a premium feature that is not available in the free version.
