When I made login passwords as a kid outside of school and the library, and approached 3 passwords I actually had to remember instead of them being my birthdate, I thought “It begins…” Now I have over a hundred. But serving Bitwarden and letting it handle ‘randomly’ generated passwords with dozens of characters allows me to reduce my load back down to 1 very secure manual password and a few frequent manual ones, for example if Microsoft logs my Xbox profile out of the console I’m not going to sit there d-padding my way through 50+ characters.
When I made login passwords as a kid outside of school and the library, and approached 3 passwords I actually had to remember instead of them being my birthdate, I thought “It begins…” Now I have over a hundred. But serving Bitwarden and letting it handle ‘randomly’ generated passwords with dozens of characters allows me to reduce my load back down to 1 very secure manual password and a few frequent manual ones, for example if Microsoft logs my Xbox profile out of the console I’m not going to sit there d-padding my way through 50+ characters.
That just made me check. Apparently my KeePass database currently sits at 325 passwords, although 50 of them sit in the trash.