![]() ![]() How you do this varies a bit between Android and Apple’s platforms. And you’re prompted to set Authenticator as your autofill provider. When you enter this view, you will be prompted to sync your passwords with your Microsoft account.Īfter a short period of time in which Authenticator syncs your passwords, the list of your passwords appears alphabetically in the Passwords view. Passwords is new, and you should see a red dot on its icon indicating that. ![]() (At the very least, you should see the Microsoft account with which you will sync passwords.) The Authenticator view provides the 2FA functionality, and you will see a list of the accounts you’ve configured, which can including Microsoft-based accounts and third-party accounts. Microsoft Authenticator now offers two main views, Authenticator and Passwords, which are accessed via tabs at the bottom of the app display. The app works identically on both platforms, with only small authentication differences related to how you sign-in on your device (Touch ID, Face ID, fingerprint sensor, etc.). And iPhone and iPad users can find the link here. The next step is to download and install the Microsoft Authenticator app on your mobile devices and sign-in to your Microsoft account. (If you are using a third-party password manager and want to switch to Microsoft-based password management, you will need to export passwords from that product into a CSV file and then import them into Edge, Chrome, or the Microsoft Authenticator app first. Whichever browser you are using, the assumption here is that you’re using this browser now to manage your online account passwords and that you’d like to have those passwords sync to mobile so that you can sign-in to apps on the web (preferably using Microsoft Edge) and via apps on iPhone, iPad, and/or Android. (And I assume that most Edge users did what I did, which is to import their Chrome data, including passwords, into the new browser whenever they switched over.) If you’re using Edge, as I am, this isn’t necessary. ![]() Most people, of course, use Google Chrome, and you can add the desktop version of that browser into the Microsoft-based password management by installing the Microsoft Autofill extension. There are two key components, a supported desktop web browser, which can be either Microsoft Edge or Google Chrome, and Microsoft Authenticator, a mobile app that, to date, had been used solely to help implement Microsoft’s passwordless vision with its 2FA (two-factor authentication) capabilities. I wish there was a name for this system, so I’ll just call it Microsoft-based password management for lack of a better term. And while there are still some features I’d like to see-like strong password generation-I feel that this system is mature and capable enough to recommend. Since then, I’ve been using Microsoft’s system for managing and auto-filling passwords across the web (using Edge), Android, and iPhone/iPad. Last month, Microsoft announced the availability of Microsoft account-based password autofill capabilities across platforms. ![]()
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