Memuat Keepass2Android Password Safe 1.09a-pre1 3
Jika download Anda belum dimulai,, klik di sini
Kategori: Alat
Ukuran: (32 MB)
Diperbarui: 31.01.2024
Developer: Philipp Crocoll (Croco Apps)
Ditambahkan Denis Rubinov
Versi: 1.10-pre
Ukuran: 31.2 MB
Diperbarui: 31.01.2024
Developer: Philipp Crocoll (Croco Apps)
Batasan Usia: Everyone
Diunduh di Google Play: 3016309
Kategori: Alat
Instalasi
Saat membongkar arsip dengan file tersebut, Anda akan diminta memasukkan kata sandi
- Unduh aplikasi instalasi XAPK, misalnya, APKPure atau File Manager .
- Buka aplikasi penginstalan XAPK yang telah diunduh dan cari file XAPK yang telah diunduh.
- Ikuti instruksi dalam aplikasi untuk menginstal file XAPK.
- Izinkan penginstalan dari sumber yang tidak dikenal: Buka 'Pengaturan' > 'Keamanan' (atau 'Biosecurity & Keamanan') > aktifkan 'Sumber tidak dikenal' atau 'Instal dari sumber tidak dikenal' untuk peramban atau pengelola file Anda. Pada model ponsel cerdas yang lebih baru, izin akan diminta ketika file individu diinstal dan tidak ada langkah yang tidak perlu dilakukan..
- Instal file APK dengan mengikuti petunjuk di layar.
- Mengembalikan pengaturan keamanan dengan menonaktifkan izin untuk menginstal dari sumber yang tidak dikenal.
Ulasan untuk Keepass2Android Password Safe
Nice, clean interface to a KeePass2 database with auto-fill support for both websites and apps. You can store the database locally, or sync it to a network server - and there are a lot of supported options ranging from your own SSH or WebDav server through NextCloud and up to the major cloud services like DropBox, OneDrive etc. Syncing is almost seamless, too. I'll often add a password on my desktop (where I use KeePassXC), then open up my phone and it's synced already. Or vice versa.
I use KeePass for Windows as my password manager, and this app comes real handy to give me access to my vault on my phone. It's very simple in its design and very easy to use, and it allows me to unlock my vault with my fingerprint. I recently started to see an issue with Google Drive, but I followed the workaround instructions, and that seemed to solve the problem for me.
I couldn't live without it. The UI is intuitive and organized. This app works offline. It takes a minute to get setup but it's a breeze after that. I can put the encrypted file that stores my passwords on a cloud of my choosing (which has its own pass phrase) and I can point desktop versions of keepassXC to it. This makes them sync up and I feel comfortable having so much control over my passwords. And best of all it's free! I strongly encourage people to donate to the developers. The world needs more of this kind of work.
This is a great app with all the features you'd expect (or more, considering that it's free) from a password management app, the features all work and are maintained by the developer, and you can easily customize the functionality by turning different parts of the app on/off to suit how you use it, which I like since the entire point of using open-source software is security and choice. It's very reliable and gives helpful warnings if something may not be working as you might intend.
Like the app. To me, it's a little cryptic where the data file is stored on my device and concerned about switching devices based on an experience with an earlier version. Would like to be able to edit folders and file names. Always suspicious about embeded access by app designer. None-the-less, I like the app and will continue to use.
The fingerprint function is pretty sick. I feel like Bond. James Bond. And the UI is bit of an improvement over KeePassDroid, which has a bit larger installed base but is likely to be surpassed by this one as long as we can keep it funded. Hint, hint, guys: Maintaining good software isn't cheap. Just remember, if the service is free *you* are the product! I had to knock a star off due to a problem with the menu item "Synchronize database...". A message flashes momentarily on the screen reporting something to effect that insufficient permissions to external storage. I've gone through Android->Apps and given this app all the available permissions. But to no avail. This forces me to close the database and "Select a new database" again before the file on external storage is read again.
Overall good app, just has a few really annoying features/bugs. More often than not I have to autofill creds twice because the first time enters something incorrect, it forces the KeePass keyboard (which wouldn't be so bad if the keyboard itself wasn't terrible), and has stopped showing up on my drop down menu. Other than that, I have had no issues at all with not being able to access my passwords and has very convenient organization tools
3 star for now. It is easy to use and simple to fill out. The constant switching between the keyboards is a little funky for a Google phone. I do not see any method to import any passwords from google chrome to keepass2android other than manual entry.
Almost perfect but a couple of glaring issues. First, I get it that Google is the one that ruined the normal Drive integration, however switching to the new way causes there to be two files left on the system with no way to sync them. I eventually exported it and did this on the PC. But now i have no way of removing the old file. I want that obsolete one gone completely but I have no idea where it's stored and if it is even accessible without rooting the phone.
Something Google changed or perhaps the way Keepass2Android interacts with Google Drive has destroyed the file synching between my phone and my desktop. KP2A appears to cache the Drive file and never updates back to it. It also gives me the option of opening a content://database.kdbx and a gdrive://database.kdbx. Something is wrong and I have no idea how to fix it. Until fixed, I can't save new passwords on my phone since I'm at risk of losing them. Developer really needs to look at this stat.