Speaking of #Keepass, #KeepassX, #KeepassXC ... I know browser extensions are probably nice for sites that disable pasting of passwords ... but those are sites you probably should find replacements for.
lnxw48a1 (lnxw48a1@nu.federati.net)'s status on Tuesday, 11-Aug-2020 03:40:21 EDT
lnxw48a1Zillions of years ago, I used #Keepass on Windows with extensions to work directly with the browser. Then I switched to #KeepassX, because the same program worked on Linux. Recently, I’ve started migrating toward #KeepassXC ... once again, the browser extensions are working nicely on Windows. (I haven’t tried KeepassXC yet on Linux, because I need to upgrade my main laptop from Kubuntu 18.04 to 20.04.)
I was thinking about switching to #Pass (which seems to be GPG + shell scripts), but the browser integration is really nice. I had forgotten how nice it is. If you used #Lastpass or #1Password, it is like that, only without any concerns that the homebase server will be penetrated.
Is it possible to have a ramdisk on #Android, such that I could sync a keyfile to it from boot, but never have it be written to storage? Thinking of a #KeePass type database or similar.
Liebe #Keepass User. Welche Applikation könnt ihr empfehlen die auf unterschiedlichen Betriebssystemen sauber läuft ? Bei mir gab es bislang IMMER irgendwo ein Problem dass die Datei nicht geöffnet werden konnte. .
@kev I never used #LastPass, because I was working at LogMeIn at the time they bought it, and talked a lot with one of the guys who audited it. Didn't want to trust my data with it after, so went with #KeePass (#KeePassXC, in particular), and have been using it for the past two years or so, with satisfaction. Only on desktop though, no clue how well it works on mobile.
Hmmm whilst doing all this de-Googling and ultimately migrating to @nextcloud for a lot of services, I'm now thinking about leaving #LastPass in favour of #KeePass. However, the latter seems to be slick than the former. Anyone else made the switch, if so, how you finding it?