On my Windows laptop, I was able to set up a passkey with Windows Hello [a fingerprint swipe] to get into a secondary Google account that really only exists to store [pages of] coloring books (PDFs)
I'm admittedly ignorant in this domain; but I thought it was interesting that my built-in Chrome passwords were, and still are, locked behind the Windows Hello pop-up and now I could theoretically use that same mechanism to sign in to a google account all together.
The answer is probably in this article but I just don't understand; I'd love to know why Windows Hello can now be used to sign-in to the account. Probably won't use it in favor of an authenticator app.
Suppose I should do a test to see how passkey behaves for the account on a Windows laptop and how that will then work on a Chromebook...
I'm admittedly ignorant in this domain; but I thought it was interesting that my built-in Chrome passwords were, and still are, locked behind the Windows Hello pop-up and now I could theoretically use that same mechanism to sign in to a google account all together.
The answer is probably in this article but I just don't understand; I'd love to know why Windows Hello can now be used to sign-in to the account. Probably won't use it in favor of an authenticator app.
Suppose I should do a test to see how passkey behaves for the account on a Windows laptop and how that will then work on a Chromebook...