It's browser based so it works everywhere. If you need to log in somewhere your are forwarded to the national login page. You log in, perform the 2 factor step and are sent back to whatever you tried to get in to. The 2 factor step can be a mobile app or a hardware token that rotates numbers regularly.
gjoel
Turn off avr soon after music stops playing or tv turns off. Otherwise it would be running on idle for hours.
If rabbit cage (outdoors) is open half an hour before sunset, phones start making noise, light turns red.
If my and my wife's phone has left the house and the alarm hasn't been activated for 20 minutes, send a notification.
Ok, so only the first one is an automation as such, but I like being in control (and it's hard to automate chasing the rabbits around until they decide to flee home).
We have a national electronic id which is pretty much only used for official (logging in to taxes, signing contracts) or semi-official (logging in to your bank, pension and other big services) stuff. You use this to log in to one of a few "official mail" providers (same use cases). So your identity is confirmed and so is that of the sender.
You usually get an email when you get this kind of mail. Then you need to log in using 2 factor authentication.
Danish: It concerns me a feather