Forum Discussion
Thanks for your response!
As I mentioned in the thread above:
As for the browser extension, I believe there are numerous combinations that can be used. For example with Windows you can use any combination of Control or Alt + optionally Shift + an alphanumeric character. That gives more than 50 different key combinations which don't interfere with the default browser shortcuts (such as ctrl+r or ctrl+e).
I'm not quite sure why this is a limitation as another open-source password manager - Bitwarden - lets you lock/unlock and activate the extension like 1Password does, but also lets you autofill the last used login for a page with a keyboard shortcut, along with giving you the ability to generate a password using another keyboard shortcut. If this were a limitation with Chrome extensions I don't think they'd have been able to do this.
What exactly is the issue with implementing a similar solution with 1Password?