Keepass is extremely easy to use. I run it on Windows, Linux, Android, OS X and IOS. I have all of my devices set up to auto-sync via SFTP with my main server as soon as it sees a LAN connection, so if I change a password from my phone while I'm out and about, every device is updated the moment I pull into my driveway.
Many people complain about two features that they shouldn't. Those are auto saving passwords and auto filling passwords. You DON'T want that. It's bad security. When I close my KeePass window, it shuts itself down, completely. I don't have to worry about it remaining open and auto filling in passwords for a stranger (or nefarious friend) who walks into my study being able to log in to my accounts just by going to my bankin
...Pokaż więcejg website and my password manager helpfully fills in the forms for them. I don't worry about people getting on my home PC because anything remotely sensitive is locked inside encrypted databases and/or on my server...the passwords for which are stored in...KeePass.
This DOES mean you have to open up KeePass, find the entry, right click on it and select copy password, then paste it into the password prompt. That being said, the search function is awesome and lists matching accounts as your typing the search in, so it never takes me more than three keystrokes to find anything.
Overall, this is an excellent piece of software. It lacks some of the features people want because they're bad security practices. Yes, you can be hosed if you forget your master password or lose your 2fa key. That isn't really a problem, though. You use many services that require passwords and muscle memory is a beautiful thing. If you're being a good, security conscious user, you want all of those passwords to be secure, long, randomized passwords, so you'll be using it often enough that you'll be typing your master password without even having to think about what it is.
Mniej