Dashlane Password Manager
p/dashlane
Simple security for organizations and their people
alban
Dashlane for Business — Solve the password problem & secure your data
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Replies
Derek Shanahan
I much prefer Dashlane to Lastpass. Mostly due to the UI/UX. Pricing seems essentially identical for teams.
Lalit Kapoor
I love Dashlane and have been a paid user for a long time. I wish it didn't eat up gigs of memory though. I have to kill the chome plugin every so often so that I can open new tabs without experiencing delays. That solved, I'd feel great recommending it to others.
alban
I've been using Dashlane for a while now, and it has become my only password management system. I was super happy (and impressed) to see them enter the payment space, really useful to have all your credit card data saved and be able to pay seamlessly from any CC on any website. I can't wait to try the new business version.
Rick Kettner
Has Dashlane added authenticator (one time password) support yet? That's one think I would miss from 1PW as it has everything in one.
Andy Chu
I've been using Dashlane since the beta as well, and it's tremendously useful especially when I have to upgrade devices and re login to everything. The auto-password changer is pretty neat, but it doesn't always work in my experience. With that said, random 28 character passwords that I don't have to remember are a godsend. Can't wait to implement the business version as well.
Dan Moore
Glad there is competition in this market space. There's still a lot of problems to solve for each of the main tools. (Counting 1password and last pass as the other 2 competitors.)
kix
Significantly more expensive than its rivals. I've been a user for quite a long time, but had to switch to 1Password. Dashlane with sync costs $40/yr, 1Password costs $65 for a life-time license. Also, exporting items from Dashlane does not work that well.
Jon Jones
@_kix What were the issues with exporting items that you found? I've been using LastPass for years, but their LogMeIn acquisition has made me leery of their future. I'm interested in experimenting with other options, and data portability is a high priority for me.
kix
@jonjones, well, here's what it comes down to: https://discussions.agilebits.co... — I had to read this thread and experiment for a couple hours just to put my Dashlane data into 1Password. Basically, the CSVs exported from Dashlane are invalid and you have to edit those by hand so that 1Password can parse the export.
Jon Jones
@_kix Thanks for the response! Wow, in reading MrC's four-point post there, that sounds like a textbook example of how *not* to export CSV. Kudos to him for figuring out it was the incorrect double-quotes that were breaking it and posting about it. I've run into precisely the same issue before, and it's fiendishly subtle and maddening. :)
Bryan Lovgren
Really like the direction of this, from a business prospective. Thirty percent of data breaches occur because of employee negligence. On a separate note I think their pricing is focusing on the wrong value metric -- users. It would make more sense, to me, if they didn't set a limit on how many users a business can have but how many site passwords they can manage. That way you maximize users while focusing on the real value -- number of managed sites. IMHO
Dean Brady
I've used LastPass since it launched and tried Dashlane when it was announced as it looked like their mobile support was better. I've found mobile support (on either) to be so-so at best. Largely due to the mobile app platform in use and their ability to determine the site/app in use. I've also found the Mac native client of Dashlane to have a huge memory leak/issue which I'm hoping they will fix soon. Great product, but has a few kinks. If you aren't using Dashlane (or LastPass) already, you need to get on board.
Aiyman Hadi
Used this tool for about 3 months, and was very unhappy with it. There are a ton of other solutions that are significantly better.
Nic
What does dashlane mean?
Dan Hauck
@nicolashitz When Dashlane started out, it was more focused on automating the checkout experience at popular ecommerce sites...so "dash" through the checkout "lane". Now they are focused on password management, which was a good pivot for them. Longtime user and fan.
Paul Shustak
I've been a happy Dashlane user for a couple of years now. The dang thing just works, which was not the case with other password managers I tried. In fact its one of the only apps I pay for. Even borders on magic sometimes ;-) I think they've got a real opportunity in the enterprise but the pricing is a concern. $2/mo/user (for up to 100 employees) seems expensive. Compare to Google apps at roughly half the price but so much greater value. Can anyone see paying this at their companies?