NFN Smith wrote:
I use a mix of KeePass and the manager that's built into Seamonkey.  I consider my KeePass store to be primary, but I let the built-in one remember passwords for sites that I use regularly.  If you use the Seamonkey mail client and let it remember passwords, you're already using the Seamonkey password manager, especially for sending mail.

Well, nothing special from me, but you can go one step further.

I use KeePass for everything including replacement of built-in manager.
KeePass integrates well with SM -> requires KeePassHttp plugin for KeePass and PassIFox for SM. You can have it at the same time for FF/Chrome/Edge -> KeePassRPC (for KeePass) and Kee (for browsers).

Additionally I keep my database remotely accessible (for me cloud, but can be any webdav/sftp...), so every device I need to have with access, has access to it and syncs almost smoothly (desktop Keepass is bit picky when I change password over phone). To achieve that for desktop KeePass I had to use KeeAnywhere plugin, Android (Keepass2Android) and iOS (I forgot the name) had the support for remote built in.

Szymon


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