Once this is done, you’ll find that 1Password now works differently in the Chrome browser. With the new software in hand, you upgrade your existing copy of 1Password (I had v7.1.2 previously) and swap out your existing browser extension for the "1Password X" one. The new v7.2 browser's "1Password X" browser extension is already available in the Chrome Web Store. The 1Password v7.2 upgrade was made somewhat difficult because even though I had purchased my copy of 1Password through the App Store, the v7.2 version of 1Password has yet to be posted there (as of this writing) and must be downloaded instead from the vendor’s (agilebits) web site, URL. Basically, what I had to do was to upgrade my version of 1Password to v7.2 (the one designed for Mojave), throw out my existing “works with High Sierra” (Google) Chrome browser extension, and replace it with a new "1Password X" browser extension. I didn’t know this at the time I chose to upgrade to Mojave but have since learned that these changes have resulted in such dynamic changes to 1Password that its developer created a new type of browser extension that he has dubbed the “1Password X project”. In macOS Mojave, Apple has made certain changes to its operating system that resulted in the "browser extensions" used by many password managers to become inoperable. I would say that my biggest issue in migrating from macOS High Sierra to macOS Mojave has been the password manager, 1Password. All of the other apps that I have had already been updated to newer versions prior to my upgrading to Mojave. They are Printopia (to v3.0.12) and anyTrans (to v7.0.1). I just installed macOS Mojave this afternoon without difficulty, but found that two of my apps needed updating as a result.
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