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Alternative to 1-Pass?


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Guest Crudeboy
Posted

Anyone familiar with 1-Pass and love the program will be dissapointed like me as it is not compatible with WM5. Sent them email and this is what I got:

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Hi,

Thank you for your email. We do hope to develop a version of 1-Pass that is compatible when we get the chance, but the timeframe is not yet known.

Regards,

Chris, Technical Support

Omega One Software LLC

www.omegaone.com

-----Original Message-----

From:

Sent: 17 April 2006 23:58

To: [email protected]

Subject: 1-Pass

Hi,

Is there any development for the above software for WM5? Thanks.

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Any good alternative? My idea is to have the PDA to auto lock with a hardware key (or combination of keys) to unlock it. Mainly just to deter people from looking at my data.... some people think just because its a gadget they can just pick it up and go through it as they please....

Guest fraser
Posted

This stuff is built in. Disable the "wake on any button" feature and enable a password for the phone to activate after X minutes. That's all I've been doing for the past year, no unauthorized access or accidental dialing that I've noticed.

Guest Crudeboy
Posted
This stuff is built in. Disable the "wake on any button" feature and enable a password for the phone to activate after X minutes. That's all I've been doing for the past year, no unauthorized access or accidental dialing that I've noticed.

Fraser,

Do you mean Settings> Buttons> Lock Tab> Do not lock buttons ?

In the password settings, I can either have "Simple 4 digits" or "Strong alphanumeric"... I am looking for single hardware button press or a combination of hardware buttons... am I missing something here?

I've got a Mini S btw.

Guest fraser
Posted

On my 2003SE device I have:

Settings/Button Lock

when device is off:

[] lock all buttons except power

[] do not lock buttons

Which I think is the same thing. I've got it set to power only. That, combined with a password, means that only the power button will turn it on, and when it does you need to enter a pin to do anything.

Given the amount of personal data on the device, I think a PIN is 100% neccessary anyway; I've always had one on my phones.

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