Enpass: https://www.enpass.io/
Started using it because of one time payment and Dropbox sync. They switch to subscription model but I still find it quite usable.
1Password. It’s really polished and works well everywhere I need it. There’s a Linux version in beta now, but even before that the browser extension available on Linux was all I really needed.
I use a wrapper[1] for the CLI version of 1Password. I spend most of my day staring at terminal windows, and it is where I prefer to work, so a CLI password manager was the natural choice.
As for why I replaced pass(1) with it, I now have a team that I need to share passwords with, and 1Password offers a perfect user experience for everyone. I will probably move to a self-hosted solution at some point, but for now, 1Password is perfect — we do use the Enterprise edition though, so your experience may be different.
KeepassXC on desktop Linux + KeepassDX on Android, database synced using Syncthing.
Reasons: Just works, (almost) never has to rely on clipboard, no browser add-on needed, doesn't rely on Android's autofill system (which is buggy, at least on my old phone), is an established open-source standard that I can continue to use for years without fear of a "service" closing up shop and disappearing off the face of the earth.
Hardware password manager (Trezor). But the console client is lack and it only works through Chrome browser on the cloud for storage. Looking for something else, but it's better than a software password app
Roboform - been using it since 2000-ish. It handles websites and Windows authentication prompts - both from web apps and native programs.
Use it on Win 10 and Android
Bitwarden. They're open-source, support was always responsive, and they share their security assessments[0][1] for perusal.
Before Bitwarden, I was using KeepassX for years. Over time, the database syncing was becoming an annoyance for me and I was looking for a hosted solution that I could also recommend to non-technical friends and family.
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[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 73.3 ms ] threadReason: command line simplicity
And Lastpass for Teams
As for why I replaced pass(1) with it, I now have a team that I need to share passwords with, and 1Password offers a perfect user experience for everyone. I will probably move to a self-hosted solution at some point, but for now, 1Password is perfect — we do use the Enterprise edition though, so your experience may be different.
[1] https://git.sr.ht/~jamesponddotco/dotfiles/tree/master/.loca...
Reasons: Just works, (almost) never has to rely on clipboard, no browser add-on needed, doesn't rely on Android's autofill system (which is buggy, at least on my old phone), is an established open-source standard that I can continue to use for years without fear of a "service" closing up shop and disappearing off the face of the earth.
Exported and switched over to Lastpass which just works. I love it.
Before Bitwarden, I was using KeepassX for years. Over time, the database syncing was becoming an annoyance for me and I was looking for a hosted solution that I could also recommend to non-technical friends and family.
[0] https://bitwarden.com/blog/post/third-party-security-audit/
[1] https://bitwarden.com/blog/post/bitwarden-network-security-a...
[edit] I built it so I could use it, I made it to be exactly how I want.