In spite of what Apple wants, I have no plans to upgrade to either Lion or Mountain Lion. What I've seen of the first and heard of the second lead me to believe I'll be losing a lot of functionality that I currently enjoy. I'm also not fond of being forced to purchase applications through Apple. I've always enjoyed customer to vendor interactions, and having them as an intermediary does not appeal to me.
The current method used by Espionage 3 would be no different than my creating an encrypted sparse image and opening that myself each time I need to run the application. If that is the case, why do I need your product?
As for unlocking the folder when I log in, that is a non-starter. The idea is to keep them locked at all times unless I am using them. As an enterprise security architect, it just makes more sense to me. Leaving them open all the time means they are vulnerable upon the system recovering from sleep mode or if by some odd chance, my password to the machine is cracked. I like the layers of security afforded by the Espionage 2 method.
Regards,
Michael
The current method used by Espionage 3 would be no different than my creating an encrypted sparse image and opening that myself each time I need to run the application. If that is the case, why do I need your product?
As for unlocking the folder when I log in, that is a non-starter. The idea is to keep them locked at all times unless I am using them. As an enterprise security architect, it just makes more sense to me. Leaving them open all the time means they are vulnerable upon the system recovering from sleep mode or if by some odd chance, my password to the machine is cracked. I like the layers of security afforded by the Espionage 2 method.
Regards,
Michael