Every day, in this column, we will bring you a more detailed look at a selected application that has just caught our attention. Here you will find applications for productivity, creativity, utilities, but also games. It won't always be the hottest news, our goal is primarily to highlight apps that we think are worth paying attention to. Today we're going to take a look at LastPass for storing and managing passwords.
[appbox app store id324613447]
Social networks, streaming services, e-mails, applications of all kinds... every day we use passwords to log in to many places. Remembering all of them can sometimes be practically impossible, having the password "1234" entered in all places "just in case" is not twice as safe. Website and app passwords can be securely collected by Keychain on your iOS, or you can use an app like LastPass, which we'll cover today, to store and manage them.
LastPass not only keeps all your passwords to various accounts safe and secret, but also notes, information about payment cards or bank accounts. In addition, it offers useful functions such as automatic filling of passwords, security with the help of Touch ID or, for example, the possibility of setting an "emergency" trusted contact.
In addition, you can use LastPass to generate strong, reliable passwords based on parameters you enter, or test the strength and security of your own generated passwords.
In its basic form, LastPass is free with a 30-day free trial of all its features. For the sum of 989 crowns per year, you get the option of sharing passwords, multi-factor authentication or perhaps priority customer support services.
Bitwarden seems better to me and it's free
1Password is about the same price and 10 levels higher in terms of stability and quality.
I think Enpass is the best, it's on mac, iphone and apple watch, it can do everything that the system key can do, it has localization, it's free (the PRO version probably has some kind of subscription and some kind of cloud), it can do everything that the PRO version does and it's equal to 1Password.
Enpass looks interesting and is not as expensive as 1Password. How about Enpass with two-factor authentication? Can it generate two-factor codes? This is one of the main reasons why I have 1Pass, it can handle two-factor login from A to Z.