상세 컨텐츠

본문 제목

Keeper Launches An Elegant And Robust Password Manager For Mac

카테고리 없음

by candnalyre1980 2020. 2. 8. 16:05

본문

Updated August 8 with new information about Keeper’s auto-capture feature. See paragraphs 4 and 5 below. Keeper is a no-nonsense password manager that puts the security of your login credentials above all else.

  1. Keeper Launches An Elegant And Robust Password Manager For Mac Download
  2. Keeper Launches An Elegant And Robust Password Manager For Mac Mac

However, it’s lack of some automated features may limit its appeal for some. When you sign up for Keeper, you’re prompted to create a master password and select a security question. The latter will be used, along with a verification code and—if enabled—two-factor authentication, to access your data if you forget your master password. Next, Keeper walks you through a four-step “quick start” checklist: creating your first record, installing the browser extension, uploading your first file, and enabling two-factor authentication.

Discover why more than 10 million students and educators use Course Hero. Create a free account now to: Create an account and get access to. Password * School.

As you complete each step, the checkmark next to the relevant items turns green. Note: This review is part of our roundup. Go there for details about competing products and how we tested them.

PCWorld Keeper’s interface isn’t fancy but it’s easy to get around. When I initially used Keeper with the Firefox browser, it didn’t automatically capture my login credentials when I signed into a website for the first time. Rather, I had to click the gold lock icons it places in the username and password fields to create a new record. Keeper prefilled the username field with my email address and the password field with a generated 12-character password as if I was creating a new account rather than just a new Keeper record. I had to delete these and enter the correct credentials. I later found out that Keeper does indeed automatically capture your login information when you visit a new site, but that feature hadn’t yet rolled out to the Firefox plugin. Using the the KeeperFill plugin with the Chrome browser, I was prompted to save my username and password and assign them to a folder in my vault.

Keeper launches an elegant and robust password manager for mac free

Although Keeper captures your credentials on your initial visit to a website, when you return, it won’t automatically fill the login fields. Instead you have to click the lock icons to access your credentials. When the record for that site opens, you must click an arrow icon next to your username and your password to fill each field. If you’re used to password managers that autofill these fields and autolog you in, these extra steps can feel laborious, even if it is for enhanced security. Keeper’s password manager surfaces in the password field as a dice icon any time you’re creating a new record, which you can do in the KeeperFill browser plugin or right in your vault. You can generate anywhere from eight- to 51-character passwords using a combination of upper- and lower-case letters, numerals, and symbols.

PCWorld Keeper’s password generator can create up to 51-character complex passwords. Both Keeper’s web-based vault and the desktop app display your passwords in a list. You can audit your passwords—Keeper gives you a strength percentage rating and lets you know if the password has been used for more than one account. Credit cards and personal data can also be stored in your vault and autofilled into web forms when making payments. Keeper supports password sharing, but, as an added security layer, only with other Keeper users. If you share with a non-Keeper user, they’ll get an email with a link to set up an account.

It also recently added emergency access, which allows you to grant access to up to five contacts, who can log in in the event you can’t for whatever reason. Keeper is free to use on a single device. To sync across multiple devices, you’ll need an Individual plan at $30 a year. Family plans cover up to five users for $60 a year. Bottom line Despite its bare-bones interface, Keeper offers robust password protection. However, it lacks some of the automation prized in most password managers, so it’s unlikely to compete with top tools.

But if you’re merely looking for strong security and don’t mind being more hands-on with your password manager, Keeper won’t disappoint.

Narrowing down the best of the best is a daunting task. To scale to the peak of product perfection, the reviewers in our lab slog through hundreds and hundreds of lesser devices, services, and apps every year, and that’s just to get to base camp. Only then can we get a clear view of the pinnacle; even then a few high-quality stalwarts can vie for the top.

Then it’s a case of narrowing down to a true winner. That’s what we do every year by compelling our staff to pick the best tech products. Typically, we limit the list to the very best 100 products, but this year, we notched the total up to 107—a good indicator of how strong the tech is this year. Keep in mind, that’s still only about 4 percent of the approximately 2,500 products we've tested. We crank out a lot of reviews.

If you compare this year’s list to, you’ll see that a lot of vendors are very consistent in product quality year-to-year. Razer always makes great gaming laptops; Apple’s iPhones and Apple Watch are often top picks; the Microsoft Surface line consistently earns accolades. There are also surprises: Google is making the best Android phone now, as well as the best digital assistant; Sony sweeps close to the entire camera field; and many of the best security products today are different than last year (so it might be time to upgrade. Across the 16 categories below you’ll find the best of everything we’ve reviewed between November 1, 2017 and today. 87 of the products earned our coveted Editors’ Choice Award, and adding a Best of the Year accolade only makes them more impressive.

Six products earned an 'Outstanding' 5-star rating; the remainder are merely 'Excellent' with almost all of earning 4 and 4.5-star ratings. Consider this your ultimate holiday gift list. With our wholehearted endorsement of every item in this story, you can't go wrong. Best Desktop Replacement $4,699 (as tested) With the option for an Intel Core i9 processor (which we saw in our test unit), the sleek 15-inch MacBook Pro is now one of the most powerful desktop-replacement laptops you can buy, making it an excellent choice for well-heeled, on-the-go creative pros. The beautiful, super-high-res panel now supports automatic color-temperature adjustment.

New options for cavernous SSD capacities will please buyers who need to render and edit big media files on the go. Best Midrange Tablet $329 No tablet delivers value like the amazing $329 iPad. Fast, secure, and easy to use, the new iPad is a reliable media and educational companion for kids or a creative tool for adults. It's compatible with Apple's Pencil stylus and has a tremendous range of third-party cases and keyboards available. The tablet's speed and deep bench of excellent iOS applications have pretty much stamped out midrange Android tablets as a category, and it's much faster and smoother than a Windows product at this low price.

This is where iOS really shines. Best Ebook Reader $129.99 Amazon’s 2018 Paperwhite brings bathtub reading to its lowest price ever. At $129.99, it’s $50 less than the next least expensive waterproof e-reader. It does audiobooks, too, and its new flat-front design is better for beach reading than previous models. (There are no nooks and crannies around the screen for sand to get caught in.) Families who use Kindles together will enjoy the new ability to save font settings, easily flipping between regular and large-type reading. E-readers should be all about simplicity and lack of worry, and the 2018 Paperwhite is a no-stress, no-worry experience. Best Android Phone $799.99 Google's new Pixel is the apotheosis of Android in 2018.

It's not just about being 'stock Android' any more; it's what Google manages to add to the mix, with guaranteed updates to the next version of Android, the best camera of any phone today, and innovative robo-secretary features that let you get back at all those robo-callers. The Pixel is also the smallest flagship phone on the market, making it clear that great power can indeed still come in a package you can hold in one hand. Best iOS Phone $1,099 It's excessive. It's the maximum. The iPhone XS Max is the most iPhone you can get: the most cameras, the best screen, the most memory, and the best radio performance.

While the same size as the popular iPhone Plus line, it has a much larger screen thanks to much smaller bezels. Now that people are paying for phones on three-year contracts, you want a phone that will go the distance.

We're confident that the XS Max will take anything that the world can throw at it through 2021. Best Add-On Battery $29.99 The best battery is one that's light enough that you forget you have it with you, but that never seems to run out of power. Xiaomi's Mi Power Bank Pro succeeds on both counts. For only $30, you get a slim, attractive, and pocketable battery that holds more than three full charges for most phones and supports both fast charging and passthrough charging, where you're charging both the battery and your phone. It's a reliable companion for anyone who tends to run out of juice halfway through the day.

Best Voice Assistant Platform We had a split decision in our voice assistance categories this year. While Amazon has the best hardware, Google's voice platform has become the best choice for people who are relying on their assistant for the most popular uses: music, calling, weather, timers, recipes, and asking questions. Google Assistant is much better at handling arbitrary requests than Amazon’s Alexa, and its presence on every Android phone gives it a huge footprint that Alexa can't match. Unless you are heavily into having a smart home—where Alexa still reigns—Google Assistant has really come to the fore as the assistant most able to help you in your daily life.

Best Robot Vacuum $949.99 Robot vacuums get smarter with each generation, and iRobot's Roomba i7+ might just be the most advanced model we've tested to date. In addition to Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant voice control, multi-story mapping, and adaptive camera-based navigation that cleans better as it learns your home's layout, it's the only vacuum we've tested that can empty its own dustbin. Sure, at $949.99 it's one of the most expensive models we've seen, but it's also the only robot vacuum out there that doesn't require you to lift a finger. Isn't that why you want one in the first place? Best Bridge Camera $1,699.99 The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX10 IV may be an overkill for many.

It’s a bridge-style camera, similar in shape to an SLR, but with a permanently attached lens. But my, what a lens. It has a 24-600mm (full-frame equivalent) zoom range, and is bright with an f/2.4-4 variable aperture. The 1-inch image sensor delivers loads of detail in every 20MP photo, and Raw capture is available at 24fps with phase detection focus. Weather-sealing, 4K video, and a sharp EVF make the RX10 IV a first-rate option for travel and wildlife photography. Best 360 Camera $699.99 The 360-degree video format may end being a flash in the pan for consumers—remember 3D televisions?

But what if you took the spherical video and turned it into something that you can watch on your phone or TV? The GoPro Fusion lets you do just that, with software that extracts a 16:9 frame from the raw 5.2K spherical video. You can pan with smooth motion control, and zoom in to lock onto details or pull way back to show the world as a Little Planet projection. And, because it’s a GoPro, the Fusion is built tough, with a rugged, waterproof design. Best Drone $799 If you’re buying a drone, chances are it’s from DJI. The company dominates the space.

It’s also not one to stand still, with a very aggressive approach to developing and releasing new models. The Mavic Air is the company’s smallest folding drone, but it doesn’t skimp on features. It delivers stable, 4K video from the air, as well as 12MP photos and stitched panoramas.

Flight is made safer via redundant systems, GPS positioning, and obstacle detection sensors. The Mavic Air even has a flight mode that maps obstacles and flies around them automatically—that’s pretty cool. Best Electric Car $88,595.00 With the 2019 I-Pace, Jaguar is the first major luxury automaker to introduce an all-electric car that combines high-performance driving with long EV range. (Technically Tesla got there first, but falls far short in terms of production and availability.) The I-Pace also sets itself apart by borrowing off-road tech from its Land Rover siblings, making it suitable for travel on and off pavement. But the biggest draw is its estimated 240 miles of range on a full charge, combined with seat-pinning performance. Best Car Technology $199.99 The Garmin Speak Plus is a dash cam, a GPS device, and an Alexa-based smart speaker all rolled into one. An update to the Garmin Speak GPS device, the Speak Plus adds dash cam functionality.

In addition to getting directions and recording the road ahead, you can use the Speak Plus to play tunes from your Amazon Music collection or ask Alexa to find a radio station. It can also control Alexa-enabled smart home devices, such as lights or a thermostat. The tiny device does its job, as long as you don't need to see onscreen maps as you navigate. Best Budget Desktop $999 (as tested) As we tested it, the configurable Dell Inspiron Gaming Desktop delivers 60-frame-per-second 1080p gaming and Core i7 pep at $999, making it an attractive bargain for gamers who emphasize value. The reason it wins for overall budget desktop, however?

You can get many of the same winning rudiments of this PC starting at $599, among them Nvidia’s dedicated “Pascal” GeForce GTX graphics cards; appealing, low-key case lighting; and full-fat Intel Core “Coffee Lake” desktop chips. Best All-in-One Desktop $1,519 (as tested) The EliteOne 1000 is not only stylish, but it has a trait found in few all-in-one PCs: the ability to easily upgrade the internal components, which live in a rectangular base section rather than behind the screen. The main focus for your eyes is a beautiful, trim 27-inch 4K display, but you’ll also note some clever details (dual front-and-back webcams that slide behind the display when not in use), as well as quiet-running internals.

And the pricing was a pleasant surprise. Best Business/Desktop Workstation $2,149 (as tested) The Z2 Mini G4 is a compact desktop with the performance of a much larger workstation, complete with ISV certifications and even the option for Xeon processors. Its proficiency is even more notable since certified, workstation-grade PCs of this size are few and far between. Architectural firms, financial modelers, research labs, and other customers who must have immense amounts of stable computing power at their disposal will swoon over this latest revision. Best High-End CPU $899 In 2017, the Threadripper line blew up the high-end-desktop CPU market and rocked Intel and its rival Core X-Series back on its heels. The 2018 revision of our favorite-value Threadripper chip brings incremental improvements to multi-threaded performance, thermal management, and overclocking. The 16-core 2950X makes AMD's flagship consumer CPU lineup even better than before, while retaining what made it great: tons of cores for the dollar, easy-to-use tweaking software, and access to all the PCI Express lanes you could ever want.

Best Budget CPU $99 Four cores, four threads, and a base clock speed of 3.5GHz: If you're a casual gamer building a PC on a budget, you'll thrill to the Ryzen 3 2200G, an inexpensive CPU with built-in “Vega 8” graphics silicon that delivers better gaming performance than its price would suggest. Don’t expect anything like the frame rates that you’d get with a desktop Radeon RX Vega card, but it's an excellent choice to power an inexpensive gaming PC and is well-provisioned for basic workloads, too. Best Inkjet Multifunction Printer $199.99 The HP Tango X, our first Editors’ Choice smart-home printer, is an all-in-one model whose forte is printing from mobile devices. It can interface with Amazon's Alexa devices, Google Home, or Windows' Cortana, and it responds to voice commands. High costs for store-bought ink cartridges make it advantageous to enroll in HP’s Instant Ink subscription program, which has an added bonus: It lets you print snapshots (up to 5 by 7 inches) from your smartphone for free, the paper cost aside. Best Portable Printer $129.99 The Sprocket 2nd Edition generates wallet-size prints from smartphones and tablets, and it even has an augmented-reality feature that makes a print—once it is associated with a video—seem to come alive when you view it with your phone’s camera from within the Sprocket app.

Its primo print quality, much better than what we have seen from other ZINK-based printers that use the same kind of no-ink-required paper stock, clinches its status as our top portable photo-printer pick. Best Scanner $599 Got loads of snapshots? You no longer have to scan them one by one. The FastFoto FF-680W is a sheet-feed desktop scanner built to scan stacks of up to 36 photo prints gently enough that they don’t get ripped in the feeder.

In testing, the FF-680W did well in scanning everything from 3-by-5-inch prints to 4-by-11-inch panoramas, and its software lets you sort and classify the scans. The FF-680W also does a credible enough job at document scanning that you won’t think of returning it once you’re done digitizing your shoeboxes full of snaps. Best PlayStation 4 Game $59.99 Sony's God of War franchise has delivered over-the-top action and inspiring fantasy settings for multiple console generations, though it's never showcased technical combat. That changed in the new God of War, a game that streamlines the combat and controls, while also radically expanding the scope of the game world. God of War doesn't reinvent the action genre, but its extremely polished, technical gameplay borrows elements from popular action titles to create something unique, yet pleasantly familiar. Best Xbox One Game $59.99 Some questioned Forza Horizon 4's necessity, given that the open-world racer debuted just two years after its excellent predecessor. But developer Playground Games has taken its incredible Horizon racing-and-music festival formula and added even more goodness, including new vehicles, fresh and addicting solo and multiplayer modes, and seasonal effects that impact the environment and change how you approach driving.

Simply put, Forza Horizon 4 is the best racing game on Xbox One—and the best this console generation. Best PC Game $59.99 Monster Hunter World came to PC months after its console counterpart, but the game was unquestionably worth the wait. The action-RPG features significant improvements to the classic hunt-and-loot Monster Hunter formula (streamlined controls, uncapped frame rates) to make it more newcomer-friendly than previous iterations. Still, mastering a weapon takes time, and perfecting your fight against a monster takes even longer. If you've longed to give the Monster Hunter series a go, World is a terrific starting point.

Keeper Launches An Elegant And Robust Password Manager For Mac Download

Best Desktop Operating System Free upgrade Microsoft continues to advance the state of the desktop operating system art, with free updates. Groundbreaking capabilities like Cortana voice-controlled digital assistant, Windows Hello biometric sign-in, Timeline, and full touch and pen support.

For businesspeople and gamers, Windows stands alone with unmatched deployment options and graphics support. It’s the only desktop operating system with rich VR and AR support, including for Oculus Rift, HTC Vive, Windows Mixed Reality devices, and Steam VR. But just for everyday working with windows and files, the OS offers many slick, unique conveniences. Best Photo Editing $9.99 per month A product doesn’t become a verb in the English language unless it’s done something well. Photoshop continues to be in a league of its own when it comes to digital photo manipulation. It’s also the top raster drawing app on the planet for graphic artists.

Adobe continually improves its photo, art, and text creativity capabilities. Of late, the company added Sensei AI technology, making the already-brilliant Content-Aware Fill tool better. It also improved selection and masking tools, and added support for the Microsoft Surface Dial.

The completely reengineered Profiles from Camera RAW are a boon to photographers. The program’s interface also continues to make complex workflows and actions simpler. Photoshop is a longtime leader, but it’s not sitting on its laurels. Best Audio Editing $199.99 While the powerful Avid Pro Tools continues to garner the most name recognition, Logic Pro X remains our favorite digital audio workstation (DAW) software in 2018. It comes with awesome-sounding virtual instruments, flexible editing tools, and top-notch mixing plug-ins.

Although it's not the least-expensive DAW on the market, it costs just $199—hundreds less than other well-established competitors. From songwriting and recording bands, to post-production, and even scoring for video games and movies, you can't go wrong. Best Cloud Storage and Sync Free OneDrive combines cloud-based file and folder storage and syncing with online productivity apps and photo viewing. The recent Files on Demand feature means you don’t have to store everything you sync to you local storage device.

Sharing and co-editing with collaborators is well-implemented, including password protection and expiration dates for share files. The latest version even includes ransomware protection with notifications and recovery options. Excellent mobile apps complement the service. OneDrive’s tight integration with Office apps and Windows 10 make it indispensable. With a $6.99-a-month Office 365 subscription, you get a whopping 1TB of storage. Best Website Builder Free; $29 per month Wix continues to lead the way in do-it-yourself website creation.

Robust

The service’s offerings are both among the easiest and the most powerful we’ve tested. Get started with a huge selection of attractive, modern templates, use Wix AI to automatically generate a site, or add intelligence through Wix Code. You can even test the waters with one of the industry’s most generous free website offerings.

If you want to sell items, services, or book appointments on your site, Wix has you covered. Best Hosting Service Starting at $4.50 per month If you want a powerful and flexible web hosting service, look no further than the marvelous Hostwinds. It offers an array of shared, VPS, dedicated, cloud, WordPress, and reseller hosting packages designed to appeal to both mom-and-pop shop owners and bigger businesses. In fact, Hostwinds' feature-packed VPS and reseller offerings make it our top pick in those categories.

Overall, Hostwinds is one of the most flexible and feature rich web hosts we’ve tested. Best Personal Finance Free Mint is an excellent personal finance service that has won multiple Editors' Choice awards thanks to its simplicity, usability, and smart blend of financial tools. It lets you set up connections to all of your online finance accounts, check your credit score, and get a good estimate of your net worth. Mint is easy to access on your smartphone or even your Apple Watch.

Even better, Mint is an ad-supported, free service, so you can give it a go without opening your wallet. Best Mobile Payment App Free Who uses cash anymore? It’s so dirty and inconvenient, especially if you have to make change. With Venmo, you can pay your friends or even your landlord without sullying a finger. Venmo also works as a social network of money, so you can see whom your contacts are paying. Venmo even lets you split payments for that night out with a group of friends—no more splitting the check or doing math that often feels unfair. Newer perks include a QR code for receiving payments easier, the ability to pay onlines stores, and Siri and iMessage integration.

Keeper Launches An Elegant And Robust Password Manager For Mac Mac

Best Meal Kit Delivery Service $11.99 Meal kit services can feel a little bit frivolous at first, but the ease of one-click meal planning, pre-portioned ingredients, and the satisfaction of a home-cooked meal is hard to beat. While many meal delivery services are excellent (Blue Apron is our other favorite, and an Editors' Choice), Sunbasket stands out.

Its wide range of recipes range from comfortable and quick to adventurous and challenging. We especially appreciate how many different dietary options are available for vegetarian, vegan, and gluten-free cooks.