I use yWriter, Scrivener (not FOSS, but worth the little money it costs) and LibreOffice. I feel well prepared for any writing.
Ardens
- 0 Posts
- 37 Comments
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile12·3 days agoI have a shitty memory, but I know myself, and how to work with me. That’s not a great memory I have, that’s common sense and knowing how I work.
You don’t really get the point here. You have to remember 1 system - not 20 passwords. Be as stressed as you want to, but even with a password manager, you have to remember the password for that. That’s 1 password you HAVE to remember, or all your passwords are lost.
I’m talking about remembering 1 system to make your passwords from - that will make different passwords for every app and site, that you can remember, because you remember the system behind it. You kan read about it here (though it is not the system that I use, it’s a great example): https://www.wikihow.com/Create-a-Password-You-Can-Remember
Let me put a system together for you, as an example.
You want a password for this site. It’s online, so you chose to put “ol” in your code. To make it unique, you chose to put “leml” for the first and last 2 characters. You like Guns’n Roses, and especially November rain, which you sing along to, so you put “WiLiYe” into it, for the first letter of each word, from the first line of the lyrics; “When I look into your eyes”.
Now you have both a unique code, and big and small letters. Now you separate it by using the ¤ sign, to also ad a special character, so your code looks like this now: olleml¤WiLiYe¤
Now for some numbers, that some sites like you to put in. Chose your lucky number, or maybe your birthday, and then add your lucky number. Say you were born 1989 in October (10th month), and your lucky number is 13. Then you can add 13 to both the year and the month. 2002 and 23. Put that on you code… olleml¤WiLiYe¤2002¤23
Now you have a unique code and a system you can remember. Even if you write your system down, it would be hard for others to figure out. It might look like: Type of connection, first and last two, first line high and low, born with luck… 3 times upper four (for the ¤ sign - at least on my keyboard).
Good luck figuring that out without any hints… :-)
Next time you come to another homepage, let’s say facebook, you code will look like: olfaom¤WiLiYe¤2002¤23 The first part is unique, and it can’t just be hacked, even though there are some similarities…
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile14·3 days agoThat’s just sad - a lightbulb with a password. 😅 I’m not talking about reusing passwords, but thanks for you comment.
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile23·3 days agoGreat system you have there. Yeah, places like work, that makes you switch often (witch is also a security risk in some ways), can be a problem. But they might have their own system added. You say every 3 months, and I’d probably put the season on the password then - like winter, spring, summer and fall…
Thanks for sharing some common sense here.
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile14·3 days agoYou are looking for at fight. That’s obvious. That’s why any sane person wouldn’t want to engage with you in a debate. I don’t have a scheme, why do you lie? Please explain what “scheme” i have, since you already know it? With is ironic, since you want me to explain it to you… You want a fight, and you are very easily revealed.
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile28·3 days agoIt’s okay that you don’t get the example as I said it was. It’s even okay that you haven’t moved on. What’s sad is, that you think it’s about a belief. I’ll take a wild guess here, and say that you might be religious too…
Anyway, if you don’t feel like doing it the smart way, just don’t. It’s really that easy. It must be sad, needing to comment on anything that you don’t like, because you do it differently.
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile18·3 days agoIf people get overwhelmed, then it’s because they don’t follow their own system. Remembering a system, is a lot easier than you seem to think. Every single person I’ve taught this, uses it. A few I know also uses Firefox’s build in password manager, because it’s easier across devices, but that’s about it. Not a single one uses any other password manager, and they don’t need to.
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile210·3 days agoThat’s a lot of logins you have. Do you use them all? Feel free to do as you like. It’s just sad that you can’t accept that some people have different abilities and experiences than you.
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile310·3 days agoTo the people in here, that gets rude and condescending when I try to tell them, that there’s a better way to remember passwords, here’s just one page that explains how it might be done. And yes, this is as unbreakable as random passwords. And you can easily make part of password change for the site or app you use it for… But hey, feel free to keep attacking me, for knowing something that you didn’t…
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile16·3 days agoThat was very important for you to say, right? Were you upvote-hunting?
Feel free to join for a good debate, if you can stay on topic with your next comment.
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile16·3 days agoI’m sorry to hear that. I can - with ease. lol.
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile18·4 days agoWas that an answer to my comment, or to the post? It seems like it was meant for the post…?
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile115·4 days agoTrue. But you don’t figure out the system, and if you did, the system could be changed in a matter of minutes. To figure out the system, you would need more than 3 samples of the passwords, at any given moment, and the likelihood of that happening is just about the same as your password manager being hacked, having a vulnerability or you giving people access to it.
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobile118·4 days agoPlease talk about your own brain, because you have no evidence that shows, that our brain is terrible at remembering. It’s actually quite good.
That you you can’t produce a quality password with a system, that’s on you. I can, easily.
It’s easy to remember a thousand password, if your system is good.
I can see, that your mind is made up, so further debate is fruitless. But it doesn’t change the fact, that I’m right here. 😉
I’ve been using mega.nz and Google Drive. I’ve tried a few other solutions, but didn’t stick with them. Then I tried Proton Drive, and it works fine. But now I mostly use pCloud, because I got a good deal, for a lifetime 2TB, for one payment. This I use now…
Ardens@lemmy.mlto Privacy@lemmy.ml•I made a chart to help choose a password manager. Please mind the clunkiness, I made it on mobileEnglish237·4 days agoI wonder why more people don’t use their brain instead? I mean, a simple system, will make it easy to have unique passwords for every site/app, and for you to be able to remember them…
If your computer can’t handle Linux Mint, then either you do something wrong, or your computer is really unstable. I won’t ask you to use Mint, but I will say, that I use it on three different computers, and not a single problem anywhere. Dual-boot is notoriously unstable - mostly due to MS… So my advice is, to use a computer for Linux by it self…
I wasted a few hours, trying to make some flatpak apps do as I wanted, before I understood how flatpaks works, and why they are not always a good solution.