
As soon as an attractive alternative is offered I’ll definitely move on unless changes are made here. Very nice, quick to update and easy to access from one platform to the other.īasically, it does what it’s supposed to, there’s not really anything in the way of an alternative so until such time as there IS, I’ll continue using KyPass Companion. Where it DOES shine is the iCloud sync feature, sharing the database seamlessly to my iPhone through the KyPass 3 app. There are several little bugs along these lines that are simply annoying while not posing a security risk or affecting the stability of the OS. This is a follow up video on my KeePass 2 tutorial. andernfalls passiert das nur dann automatisch, wenn auf Computer 2 ebenfalls die KeePass Datenbank. Were using KeePassium together with Dropbox to do all of that. Computer 2 muss nun manuell eine Synchonisation in KeePass anstoen, damit die nderungen von Computer 1 auch in seiner KeePass Datei bernommen werden. There’s a ‘generate new password’ button on the right, when I click into the password text box nothing should change. Dropbox erkennt nun diese neue KeePass Datei und schiebt diese hoch in die Cloud.
#Kypass dropbox sync generator#
The password generator automatically generates a new password the first time you click in the text box.

Yes, the icons for the entries can be updated from the corresponding URL, however the changes aren’t permanent, often reverting back to the default icon multiple times during a session.

This feels like a very rushed, slapped-together application that DOES offer some nice features but the overall experience isn’t great. Where is falls short is in look, feel and polish overall. For what it does, KyPass Companion is solid and stable on OS X 10.9.
