Same here! I have tried clicking both options and nothing works. Keeps popping up every couple of minutes. I restarted and it's still happening. The only thing I see is that there is an update 14.3.1 that I will try to install and see if that helps.
I can't even work today. I'm 2.5 hours into the day and it has popped up at least 10 times! There is no way I can find to report to Apple. My iCloud mail was inactive 3 hours yesterday, so I lost everything... even going to iCloud.com.
Same here. Just started today. Pops up every few minutes. I *did* change my account password yesterday, coincidentally. I'm curious if it's related to that (and everyone else here happened to also change their password yesterday), or if it's unrelated.
I am having the same issue. It started on my Macbook and now on my iMac.... every 10 minutes no matter what I choose or if I close the dialogue box. The weird thing is that my iCloud icon has changed too... only in the lockscreen setting... it's really annoying... I have finals and papers to write and it keeps popping up everywhere...
This is happening to me too and nothing above is working! I don't even have itunes subscription so logging in and out is not an option for me, as far as I know but I'm not really a MAC person so half the stuff on this PC is foreign to me. All I know is I find MAC so frustrating compared to PCs...
Same problem. I logged out and shut down my computer and it was ok for a week. Now it's back. I'm also getting all notifications that my other devices (phone, watch) are now connected to this account when they have always been connected. Seems like Apple can't cope with customers owning multiple devices anymore...
Per the subject line, I tried to turn on Messages in iCloud but get the above error. I am using the same account for both. The only difference is that as this is an old @me.com Apple account that iCloud is somehow reverting the new @iCloud.com version to @me.com for that login whereas messages is using the new version of the same account @iCLoud.com. For Example:
I think it is an issue with the iPhone 11.4 beta. iPad works with no issue using both na...@me.com and na...@icloud.com turned on for both Messages and Facetime using Messages stored in the cloud. After installing 11.4 on iPad and iPhone today, immediately got Not Available notification once iPhone retarsted. iPad worked with no issue and uploaded all Messages directly to the iCloud.
Since updating to the newest 11.4 beta, I got the same popup saying that my accounts were different so the functionality was not available. Under my iMessages setting, I am logged in with my @icloud.com email address while my icloud account is using my legacy @me.com account. This has not been an issue for me before and is also not an issue for me on my ipad - I am only having this issue on my iPhone X (don't have another iPhone device to test with at the moment).
I went round and round with this and finally solved the issue. Capitalization matters in this build of iOS. You will have to check your AppleID, icloud login, and imessages login to make sure they are all the same. Everything is based on how your AppleID is spelled. Check your AppleID first and sign out of all services until they all show the exact email address. You will need to do the same if you need to change @me or @icloud.
Hi. With the Dropbox device-limit double-cross, I'm looking at my options for what to do when the time comes that we add/change a device, and we'll be shut out of using that for sync of our 1Password data.
My wife has my iCloud as a secondary account on her devices, so that we can sync our contacts and calendars, and share purchases and iTunes Match. How do I tell 1Password to seek out the secondary iCloud in order to keep our vault synced? We have only one vault.
And before I get what seems to be the reflexive answer these days, I'm extraordinarily reluctant to move to a 1Password.com account. I'd like to keep my very recently purchased standalone license of 1Password 7 going on our Macs in conjunction with our purchased Pro features on iOS.
If you want to sync your 1Password data using iCloud, you can only do that with the iCloud account that you are currently using on your device (i.e. your Apple ID). That's where your iCloud Drive data is stored, so that's the only place 1Password will be able to look.
I know you mentioned this in your message, but a Families account will do all that you need. We built it exactly because it's more flexible that using third-party tools such as iCloud and Dropbox. A Families allows you to add multiple members to the accounts, and share data between them without any special configuration, so I still recommend you give that a try and see if that works for you. We have a 30 days free trial available so you can see if that's something you would like.
The subscription model allows us to work around any limitation imposed by third party services so we don't have to rely on anyone to provide you with all the features 1Password has. So ultimately, this model benefits everyone, although I certainly understand where you are coming from.
I was quite reluctant to switch to 1Password 7 as well and have been using Version 6 until January until I finally convinced myself to try the subscription model and I have to say, I haven't looked back since. The sync is working perfectly for me and is way faster than it was with third party sync options. Especially the family version provides a lot of functionality that was not possible with the standalone version, I really like having a shared vault with my wife and another shared vault with my parents for keeping our secrets without them knowing my MasterPassword. Having the ability to have my account restored by my wife and having the ability to restore my parent's accounts ist just great. The additional security of the Secret Key also puts my mind at ease.
Also for security software I think subscriptions will be the only way forward, since it takes constant investment in developing the security architecture and reevaluating the threat model. Of course, there will always be design improvements, some new features etc. but the main work is not seen by the average user.
1Password even made me reconsider my stance on subscription software in general and I have to admit I am not as reluctant as I used to be towards subscription models. For MS-Office for example, upgrade costs were substantial and Office 365 includes a lot of great features that do not exist in the standalone version via the OneDrive integration.
@peacekeeper, thank you so much for your feedback! We really appreciate it and I am super happy to hear that you and your family are enjoying 1Password and using all benefits a 1Password Membership is providing.
We offer a 30 days free trial exactly to prove you how 1Password.com can work in any scenario, even when other tools don't ;) I am looking forward to hearing your thoughts! And of course, if you have any questions, we are here to help :)
We would like to open up use of iCloud on our iPadOS devices, but only want to allow users to log in with their managed iCloud account. Is there a way in Jamf Pro to either pre populate the domain and/or user and lock the user into only signing in with their managed AppleID?
@astrugatch There is no mechanism in Apple's current MDM specification that allows you to restrict the domain used for iCloud/AppleID. That would be required before Jamf could add support for it. If your organization has a support account with Apple (guessing that since you're using Managed AppleIDs the odds are good you do) I'd suggest you open a case asking for the ability to restrict iCloud/AppleID to specific domains.
The way you could get around it is to make sure you have the option "Apple ID and iCloud" unchecked in your PreStage Enrollment. This will prompt the user to enter their credentials when setting up the iPad. Then have a config profile push down to restrict account changes to iCloud accounts.
The way we 'report' on this, is that we manage all applications either through forced install or via self-service, but they are all managed. If you create a search or smart group of any device that has 'unmanaged' applications, these will be the users that have signed in with an unmanaged Apple ID.
Thats rough. I definitely can't trust 6000 school children to follow instructions. I can barely trust the adults... My apple rep just gave me hope that this would be manageable in iOS 16, but i'm not putting all my faith in that...
We basically create a step by step guide that classroom staff followed in order to provision devices, i.e which wifi to connect to, log in here, log in there with your school credentials, and then reported on anyone that didn't do it properly. But the most important thing we stated was that deployment is not an IT responsibility, it is the school responsibility, so here are the instructions!
Deployment is definitely on them, but when kids have stuff their not supposed to they DO come calling. (Though we are armed to put it back on them). We deployed quickly offsite during the height of the pandemic BEFORE we were able to get managed IDs and Federation set up, so this wasn't even part of the workflow at the time. We skipped aIDs entirely until now. Now I'm in the rough spot of opening the doors, but only allowing them in with an "approved" account.
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