Does any of these (or any others) allow you to fill in the login information on websites (like roboform does)?
SplashID on the desktop as well as android will auto fill in your user name and password. It is once again my favorite password manager

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Does any of these (or any others) allow you to fill in the login information on websites (like roboform does)?
I have tried the password managers that have been listed. None of them quite did it for me. The closest that I have found is "Wallet" by Tim Clark. I like that it is customizable and will backup to Dropbox.
I looked at many password manager apps and I decided on Pocket. It's already got many pre-organized common categories that you can add to or edit easily, which I found very helpful as far as starting me getting organized. Others don't do this, and I found it frustrating trying to divide my passwords accordingly.
Also, it has the option of 'scrambling' your password, so that if by some reason someone were to gain access, it wouldn't help them.
It is very sensitive in that it logs out rather quickly when not in use, (reasonable amount of time of inaction) as well as clears your clipboard upon exit.
Not to mention, its one of the more aesthetically pleasing apps in this field.
I'm very happy with it and the fact that it backs up to Dropbox is nice, too.
I have been using SplashID for Palm, PPC and Blackberry for years. I just found out they have a version for Android and since I just got the Droid...I am going to get that as soon as I can...Never used the other one.
Okay, I've decided that I'm sick of using Word for my Password database, and like the idea of an Android app that two-way autosyncs with a cloud-based PC database of Passwords, so I can autofill password boxes, and maybe not even KNOW the password (that way, they're strong passwords). Does Keepass still have the sync issue between the PC software and the Android software? If you're updating a file stored on cloud, then surely it'll be the same file no matter how you access it?
However, a couple questions:
- Is it a good idea not to use Android apps for Password databases that aren't official? If the android app isn't made by the PC software company, then how trustworthy is the developer?
- Is cloud-based storage secure enough? If the database is 128-bit encrypted (for example), is that sufficient? Or is cloud-based storage somehow less secure than something stored on my PC at home, for example?
- Can we get a poll going for this topic? It's something I'm really keen on =)
I've not had any sync problems between my ubuntu pc with keepassX and the keepass app on my phone. I set them to both use the same database which lives in dropbox. I just have to remember to save any changes I make. Dropbox is encrypted as is the keepass file. I don't know any of my passwords as it's pretty easy to get the app to enter them.
And the developer couldn't access the passwords if he wanted to? Don't want my ENTIRE password database falling into wrong hands :/
I've been using Splashid for years and it works great on Android..
Ski
I'm finding Keepass on my phone with KeepassX on my Ubuntu laptop both using the same file located in dropbox pretty good.
The password generator on KeepassX is a good feature, now all my passwords are different, random and long. I don't even know them, nor do I need too now.
Been using SplashID 5.3 with Nexus One. Continually hangs phone, no smooth syncs, their customer service is poor - and each new version costs a bomb! I'm now stuck with "force restart" every time I activate SplashID on my phone. Trying to decide what to use instead.
Do you just use the field autofill function of keepass? It's not as complete as Lastpass, but it's still pretty good.
I tried Lastpass a couple days ago, but didn't like it's interface... And after hearing of a potential hacking of Lastpass, I'm not sure I want to rely on an online database. Does anyone know how likely it was Lastpass actually got hacked?
Also, given sites such as Lastpass aren't immune to hacking, what does that say about storing a Keepass file on dropbox? Is that secure?
Hope none of my Lastpass files were hacked... :/
I use a spreadsheet in Google Docs. You can access it from any web browser, it saves changes automatically for you, you can have a different tab for work, home, school, etc.., and there is an Android app. What more do you need?
The unusual LastPass activity gave me more confidence in them.
Both LastPass and (KeePass+Dropbox) encrypt the files on your end. If someone does hack LastPass/Dropbox then they get your encrypted DB.
There are no known weaknesses in either LastPass or Keepass, so the only way is brute forcing passwords, just have a long password, then we are talking millenium to crack.
Lastpass does have more advantages, but alas me trying to explain them would expose my novice security knowledge.
Go on, try and explain the advantages of Lastpass over Keepass =). I much prefer Keepass to be honest.