![]() ![]() So I've spent all of today trying to get a Bitwarden server up and running but I can't get it to work. I think your looking at the hosted version Google workplaces works pretty well with web and cromebooks based systems, but then you have to have anouther system to manage systems.īitwarden is free and opensource and self hosted. If so office 365 integrates much better with windows, and you can use it for windows management, and comes with office. Poor performance of the web-based office apps compared with google docs (calculations and general navigation lag on large sheets) and also the complete lack of function to reference/pull data from other workbooks with the web-based apps for some reason. ![]() Just little things that seem a lot more streamlined and simple on the google ecosystem (so far. even though the dedicated microsoft to-do list application does allow recurring tasks. Lots of silly niggles like you can't create recurring tasks within teams for assignment without using broken 3rd party apps. I've given 365 a go for a few weeks with a few users and really didn't get on with it. It seems like such a simple thing to require but with no obvious solution. Don't get why there isn't just a baked in password manager, dictated by organisational unit/group as defined in Workspace, rather than only personal password vaults. I really want a free, self-hosted solution if possible. Unfortunately it seems there's a limit of 2 users per organisation unless you pay for the subscription. Id also take a closer look t office 365, seems to work better for a lot of businesses Ive seen. Make an account per user, and give the user access to the passwords they need. i7 8700k delidded undervolted, Gigabyte Z390 UD, 4x16GB 3200MHz, 1x 512GB SSD (Boot), 1x 1TB Samsung 980 Pro NVMe (Ceph-OSD), 2,5G NIC.Ryzen 9 3950X, Asus Strix X570E F-Gaming, 2x32GB3200MHz ECC, 2x 512GB NVMe ZFS-Mirror (Boot + Testing-VMs), 2x14TB ZFS-Mirror + 1x3TB (TrueNAS-VM), 1x 1TB Samsung 980 Pro NVMe (Ceph-OSD), 10G NIC.MSI Optix MAG274QRFDE-QD, BenQ ZOWIE XL2720 144hz, Acer S242HLDBID 60hz Not the best, but was MSRP at the Time)ġx3TB HDD TrueNAS-SMB-Share (Shadowplay-Storage) Zotac RTX 3090 AMP (+250 Mem, undervolted Core. Already peeved over potentially moving over to entirely cloud based. I'm open to other suggestions to alternative password managers of course, but I'd rather keep it free and semi-DIY! Would be good to have it self hosted from within my existing google drive, rather than bringing in another 3rd party. Maybe I could use a FTP server as I know KeePass can read FTP URL's? Bit of a disgusting solution. Maybe via some URL unique to each department. I need some way of having a password manager that integrates with my different departmental shared areas. If I were able to do this, users could simply navigate to the physical google drive folder on their PC, and immediately open the shared KeePass database with their desktop installation of KeePass. Obviously the web app lacks a viewer of KeePass databases and I'm not plugging my credentials into a 3rd party plugin! The issue is this - you can't sync shared drives with the Google Drive desktop folder, only your personal drive area. I can't figure out a nice way of integrating it into google drive. Currently using KeePass with each department having their own separate database of passwords for 3rd party sites. I'm trying to think up a decent password storage/hosting solution which links in with shared google drives. I'm reluctantly trialling Google Workspace for small business. To add another non-Apple machine, you would just set up a git repo on it and link to the Github repo.Apologies if this isn't strictly server related but. The article is about syncing Obsidian files (a note-taking program), but everything is exactly the same for any type of files, and the method lets you keep your database on iCloud so you don't lose the smooth, trouble-free sharing across your Apple devices. You have to push and pull changes for them to sync, and some people won't like taking the extra trouble. The repository on the iPhone is controlled by an excellent app called Working Copy, which costs $25. But I'll mention one quite technical solution that is explained here it essentially uses three Git repositories: one on iCloud, one on Github (or some other host), and one on your Linux VM. To add non-Apple devices to the sharing group, Mike Cowper's answer is probably the easiest (use Dropbox, OneDrive, or Google Drive instead of iCloud). That works flawlessly and is easy to set up. For sharing only between Apple devices, by far the easiest method is to put the database files on iCloud and download the Strongbox app for iPhone. ![]()
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