A friend of mine is using a Samsung tab, the Galaxy TAB 20 2018 10.5.
She is using the Chrome browser and has installed the Bitwarden app.
On a Windows PC she is using the Chrome browser as well and has
installed Bitwarden. In the Chrome browser the Bitwarden extension is
visable and she can use it. On het tab not. I cannot find any way to
use the Bitwarden app in Chrome.
Fokke Nauta <usenet@solfon.nl> wrote:
A friend of mine is using a Samsung tab, the Galaxy TAB 20 2018 10.5.
She is using the Chrome browser and has installed the Bitwarden app.
On a Windows PC she is using the Chrome browser as well and has
installed Bitwarden. In the Chrome browser the Bitwarden extension is
visable and she can use it. On het tab not. I cannot find any way to
use the Bitwarden app in Chrome.
Chrome Mobile does not permit installation of extensions aka add-ons.
That's a deficiency with the mobile version of Chrome. If you want a
web browser to which you can install add-ons, look at Firefox Mobile
(and variants of Firefox may also permit add-ons).
https://www.guidingtech.com/best-android-browsers-with-extension-support/
If you want a web browser you can customize by using extensions, you do
NOT use Chrome. Alas, it's not all great for Firefox Mobile either.
Security or behaviorial tweaks you can make in Firefox Desktop using about:config are not availble for Firefox Mobile, because users no
longer have access to about:config to get at the advanced settings. The major draw to mobile platforms is, well, they're mobile, but are no
where as robust in hardware, OS, and apps as are desktop platforms. Unfortunately, many apps, and even web sites, are dumbing down to the
lowest common denominator: mobile platforms.
Google gets revenue from their ads, and tracking (e.g., Google
Analytics) that they provide to their customers (i.e., web sites that
employ Google Analytics). The mobile market overtook desktop computers,
so mobile platforms, especially Android, are the most common devices
doing the Web.
https://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share
Google wants to push their Manifest v3 onto desktop web browsers, too.
This severely cripples most adblockers. Those that switched to V3 are
not nearly as robust, or sometimes nearly unusable, as for those that
support the old V2 manifest spec. Mozilla said they will support both
V2 and V3 for now in Firefox, but how long that lasts is unknown. While Mozilla has their own agenda, much of it follows what Google does.
https://www.cpomagazine.com/data-privacy/mozilla-solves-the-manifest-v3-puzzle-to-save-ad-blockers-from-chromapocalypse/
Google didn't just target mobile platforms by throttling their Chrome
web browser by not allowing any extensions to it. They also want to do
the same on desktops with Manfest V3. Adblockers cut into their ad and tracking revenues.
Your friend will have to decide: continue using Chrome that does not
permit extensions, or switch to a different web browser that does permit extensions.
I will install Firefox, and will work from there.
Fokke Nauta wrote:
I will install Firefox, and will work from there.
The release version of firefox mobile only allows add-ons from a curated list, the nightly version allows all add-ons.
Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> wrote:
Fokke Nauta wrote:
I will install Firefox, and will work from there.
The release version of firefox mobile only allows add-ons from a curated
list, the nightly version allows all add-ons.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/bitwarden-password-manager
The Bitwarden add-on is in Mozilla's add-on store. Bitwarden's web site points to the Android store to get the app at https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.x8bit.bitwarden.
Never used Bitwarden, so I don't know if you use just the add-on, just
the app, or both.
Chrome Mobile does not permit installation of extensions aka add-ons.
That's a deficiency with the mobile version of Chrome.
VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:
Chrome Mobile does not permit installation of extensions aka add-ons.
That's a deficiency with the mobile version of Chrome.
I didn't know that. https://browserhow.com/installing-extensions-on-android-chromium-browser-experimental/
So I looked up why an extension wouldn't be allowed on an Android Chrome
and what came up, surprisingly, was that you can do it if you want to. https://virgool.io/@Androidtechniques/how-to-install-chrome-browser-extensions-on-android-kznqijlfcmtx
But you have to use a chromium browser to do it, not the Chrome browser. https://www.ghacks.net/2021/11/22/how-to-get-chrome-extensions-on-android/
The Subject says "Chrome", not "any Chromium variant". Users tend to
stick with the major products instead of look for less market share
products. The OP is probably using Chrome because that is what came pre-bundled on his Android smartphone.
Never used Bitwarden, so I don't know if you use just the add-on, just
the app, or both.
On 28-05-2023 15:39 VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:
The Subject says "Chrome", not "any Chromium variant". Users tend to
stick with the major products instead of look for less market share
products. The OP is probably using Chrome because that is what came
pre-bundled on his Android smartphone.
Given almost all browsers are based on only three underlying variants, why would anyone be 'stuck' on any one specific browser such that they would
live with its infirmaries when there are many browsers to choose from?
webkit
chromium
mozilla
VanguardLH wrote:
Never used Bitwarden, so I don't know if you use just the add-on, just
the app, or both.
Can someone who uses it explain what this Bitwarden app extension does?
On Sat, 27 May 2023 13:31:57 -0500, VanguardLH wrote:
Never used Bitwarden, so I don't know if you use just the add-on, just
the app, or both.
Can someone who uses it explain what this Bitwarden app extension does?
mike <this@address.is.invalid> wrote:
VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:
Chrome Mobile does not permit installation of extensions aka add-ons.
That's a deficiency with the mobile version of Chrome.
I didn't know that.
https://browserhow.com/installing-extensions-on-android-chromium-browser-experimental/
So I looked up why an extension wouldn't be allowed on an Android Chrome
and what came up, surprisingly, was that you can do it if you want to.
https://virgool.io/@Androidtechniques/how-to-install-chrome-browser-extensions-on-android-kznqijlfcmtx
But you have to use a chromium browser to do it, not the Chrome browser.
https://www.ghacks.net/2021/11/22/how-to-get-chrome-extensions-on-android/
The "solution" is to not use the Chrome web browser on Android, but to
use a different Chromium-variant, like Kiwi. Instead of using Google's
web browser, you use someone else's. That Kiwi supports extensions does
not obviate that Chrome does not allow extensions.
The Subject says "Chrome", not "any Chromium variant". Users tend to
stick with the major products instead of look for less market share
products. The OP is probably using Chrome because that is what came pre-bundled on his Android smartphone.
https://gs.statcounter.com/browser-market-share
There are a lot more Android phones than Apple hence why Chrome has the
major mobile web browser market share. Safari follows for Apple phone's market share. For anyone picking a non-bundled web browser as their
choice, you're into the miniscule market share. I use Firefox on my
desktop and smartphone. Yep, I'm in the major minority.
On Sat, 27 May 2023 13:31:57 -0500, VanguardLH wrote:
Never used Bitwarden, so I don't know if you use just the add-on, just
the app, or both.
Can someone who uses it explain what this Bitwarden app extension does?
On my desktop I use both Chrome and Firefox.
On 28-05-2023 15:39 VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:
The Subject says "Chrome", not "any Chromium variant". Users tend to
stick with the major products instead of look for less market share
products. The OP is probably using Chrome because that is what came
pre-bundled on his Android smartphone.
Given almost all browsers are based on only three underlying variants, why >would anyone be 'stuck' on any one specific browser such that they would
live with its infirmaries when there are many browsers to choose from?
The "solution" is to not use the Chrome web browser on Android, but to
use a different Chromium-variant, like Kiwi. Instead of using Google's
web browser, you use someone else's. That Kiwi supports extensions does
not obviate that Chrome does not allow extensions.
No, the solution is to use the Bitwarden app: https://bitwarden.com/help/getting-started-mobile/
which uses various auto-fill services, depending on your version of Android. https://bitwarden.com/help/auto-fill-android/
That should work with any browser, and perhaps non-browser apps too.
The "solution" is to not use the Chrome web browser on Android, but to
use a different Chromium-variant, like Kiwi. Instead of using Google's
web browser, you use someone else's. That Kiwi supports extensions does
not obviate that Chrome does not allow extensions.
Theo <theom+news@chiark.greenend.org.uk> wrote
The "solution" is to not use the Chrome web browser on Android, but to
use a different Chromium-variant, like Kiwi. Instead of using Google's
web browser, you use someone else's. That Kiwi supports extensions does >> not obviate that Chrome does not allow extensions.
No, the solution is to use the Bitwarden app: https://bitwarden.com/help/getting-started-mobile/
which uses various auto-fill services, depending on your version of Android.
https://bitwarden.com/help/auto-fill-android/
That should work with any browser, and perhaps non-browser apps too.
Where does bitwarden store those passwords?
Are they stored on someone else's computer or on your own computer?
VanguardLH <V@nguard.lh> wrote:
The "solution" is to not use the Chrome web browser on Android, but to
use a different Chromium-variant, like Kiwi. Instead of using Google's
web browser, you use someone else's. That Kiwi supports extensions does
not obviate that Chrome does not allow extensions.
No, the solution is to use the Bitwarden app: https://bitwarden.com/help/getting-started-mobile/
which uses various auto-fill services, depending on your version of Android. https://bitwarden.com/help/auto-fill-android/
That should work with any browser, and perhaps non-browser apps too.
Theo
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 297 |
Nodes: | 16 (2 / 14) |
Uptime: | 04:47:14 |
Calls: | 6,666 |
Files: | 12,213 |
Messages: | 5,335,886 |