
The Kee add-on by Chris Tomlinson does a fine job. I used to recommend Tusk, but it is no longer maintained. You'll need to use a browser extension for that. While auto-type is natively supported in the KeePass desktop application, auto-fill isn't. My go-to choice for a mobile app is Keepass2Android Password Safe for Android (supports Quick unlock, fingerprint unlock, syncs to your cloud service), and KeePassium or Strongbox for iOS. It's safe because the database is encrypted. Dropbox, OneDrive, GoogleDrive, or, if you want full control, a self-hosted solution) and you have cross-platform sync. It's easy, just place the KeePass database in your cloud storage service's folder (for e.g.

His requirements were quite simple: cross-platform sync, a mobile app and auto-fill on desktop. What if their services get hacked or someone finds a bug in the service's extensions or apps that can be exploited?Īnyway, I managed to convince a friend to switch over to KeePass. Meaning you do like it says and you wont be able to sync with Google Drive, getting some strange looking errors.While I see the advantages of using cloud-based services to store passwords, especially when it comes to comfort, I do find the use of such service to risky. Q: OK, why do I need your guide and not the one provided by the plugin developer ? A: First the official tutorial that has some steps missing and is sadly not up to date with the new features of Google's API Console. I'm using Windows 7 and 8, Windows XP, Ubuntu Linux and Android and this software supports all of them and has even plugins support. That means it runs virtually on anything. Ports of it on: PocketPC & Smart Devices, Windows Phone, Android, iPhone / iPad, Mac OS X, BlackBerry (including 10), J2ME / mobile phones (old ones), JavaScript (browsers, runs on a webserver), Palm OS. Q: Why KeePass and not RoboForm or RoboForm2Go or software XYZ?Ī:It's FREE and the supported operating systems: Windows 98 / 98SE / ME / 2000 / XP / 2003 / Vista / 7 / 8, each 32-bit and 64-bit, Mono (Linux, Mac OS X, BSD. A: Look at the upper image, if you got not a passwords like dKeDjupfS22ykVSyzAmo and you can memorize them for each site you use then you are a easy target for some script kid that dreams to be a hacker.
