> Which consumer base has demanded enhanced security and convenience (for which passkeys are the proclaimed answer)? The non-tech crowd has no idea what it is and is probably just hearing about it. The tech crowd on a forum like HN seems to be mostly against it because of issues with account recovery and cross-device use that passwords don’t pose.
Yeah it's going to be mostly the tech crowd at this point, and it will filter down to non-tech people. And we will all be better off when we are all using passkeys. Looking at my girlfriend's computer her password situation is a nightmare of potentially compromised passwords, reuse of weak passwords, among other issues. Even after spending hours trying to clean it up there are still tons.
If we were in a passkey only world then no more weak passwords for her to reuse, no chance of phishing said password from her. Even if the server gets hacked there is no password to get pwned.
I really don't care what the contingent of passkey haters on here say. A lot of the discourse here isn't what it used to be. Little better than Reddit for techies.
> From what I understand, it seems like passkeys may ultimately rely on SMS OTP or similar mechanisms for account recovery. The other likely result would be losing the account forever, especially if the user is a single device one (there are billions of such people around the world).
That's not as I understand it. Why would SMS OTP be used? 100% of accounts today will already have a password, that's how you would login if you lose your only passkey device.
If/When passwords are not a thing anymore then why wouldn't the recovery use a "lost password" type flow that happens is facilitated via the account email?
> I’m going to wait it out a little longer to see how the interoperability factors play out in reality and learn from those who are braver than me.
Fair enough, but you can add a passkey to an account and your password will still work. So it's not like it will cause any harm to try it. You can even remove passkeys from an account if you really don't want to use it.
The worst thing about passkey support on Amazon is they didn't embrace it completely so you still have to go through all of the login form bullshit instead of being a one step biometric unlock that passkeys can enable.
Mac computers are more capable than they have been for a long time, if ever. All it takes is for a developer to have the will to make it work on Mac.
Recent game releases for Mac include:
- Lies of P
- Baldurs Gate 3
Soon - Resident Evil 4
Slightly older release - Resident Evil Village
Maybe Valve just can't hack it? They also flamed out on their VR support a few years back, only releasing a few betas before they gave up and cancelled the whole thing.
iOS 17 has multiple and named timers, why make a rant when a major part of it is already a non-issue?
To fix your confusion:
Timers - generally considered one time. If you swipe away the notification the timer is finished. If you press the circular arrow button it will restart the timer. Pretty obvious. On the Lock Screen they are clearly labeled as "Done" and "Repeat"
Alarms - by default alarms are set with snooze on. Swiping away will snooze. There is a "ZzZ" and "X" button on the notification. On the Lock Screen they are clearly labeled as "Snooze" and "Stop". If the snooze function is disabled on an alarm the only option is to stop the alarm.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hmiJ0OzFKd0