Call me old fashioned as well, but any password associated with a financial institution or requires accurate personal information I do not enter digitally ANYWHERE. Let alone trust in the hands of any third party organization. I believe in the DTA philosopy (Don't Trust Anyone) My method is simple. I air gap sensitive passwords (hand written in a safe). For non sensitive sites I use a base password which meets most all PW requirements with an intuitive variable. In addition I use a common alias for these sites: false name, 123 main st, NY, NY... I see no reason to provide personal information to hundreds of websites.
As far as I can tell, they still have the premium option, but they allowed the free option to work on multiple devices. IOW, there are still some premium services that aren't free, imo.
I think that's correct. With LogMeOnce... if you want to use on multiple devices, you must store your stuff in the cloud, and that's their $1/mo option. (Free if you use only 1 device and keep your info on it.)
I keep my master database file on Dropbox. You can access Dropbox from any device. At least for Android, there are KeePass apps. I use Keepass2Android. https://keepass2android.codeplex.com/
Considering that it is free and open source, maybe try it first and then if it does not meet your needs, upgrade.
Follow up... FWIW Changed all my passwords to strong ones with LastPass. The 1st website I changed went "smooth as a gravy sandwich" and just like LPs instructions. I was thinking, "great... I'll work through these quickly". HA! That was the ONLY one to go as easily as LP said. Some others went fairly easily too, but others were annoyingly difficult. All of the "automatic" ones failed and had to be done manually. If you decide to go this route, be prepared for a lot of "copy and paste", "editing" and "retrys". I eventually got all of my important sites done, but I wouldn't describe the process as "easy".
one reason i like Keepass is i can keep the data[base] on a USB stick, my computer, and on say Google Drive...3 places is LastPass for Cloud storage only? [wouldn't use it then] marc
I just double-checked to verify. On my notebook, it also stores the database locally so it can be accessed without an internet connection. I suspect this is true with mobile devices as well. You can also export/import the database.