http://supergenpass.com/
From the site:
Instead of storing your passwords on your hard disk or online—where they are vulnerable to theft and data loss—SuperGenPass uses a hash algorithm to transform a master password into unique, complex passwords for the Web sites you visit. There’s no software to install.
Yah I'm pissed because Mr Private is trying to make cash off it; I was going to send everyone to get Rick Rolled! At least my waste of the domain would have been funny, not greedy.
I notice three super cool points on this immediately:
I think it would be great for blind users
My little battery icon is tiny, but using essentially the full length of the phone as the battery indicator gives a much finer grain of remaining battery life.
(if they can make the battery-life detector accurate *and* the sloshing feedback accurate, of course)
When I'm on the phone, I will automagically have a sense of the battery life without even looking at the display.
Conceivably, the sloshing technique could become preferable to the battery icon.
It took me a while to realize a speed bump was a good thing for a CPU...
http://supergenpass.com/ From the site: Instead of storing your passwords on your hard disk or online—where they are vulnerable to theft and data loss—SuperGenPass uses a hash algorithm to transform a master password into unique, complex passwords for the Web sites you visit. There’s no software to install.
"Where's my chair??"
[intercom:] "(sszzkk) uh, we need a cleanup on mile 183... that's a satellite cleanup on mile 183."
Yah I'm pissed because Mr Private is trying to make cash off it; I was going to send everyone to get Rick Rolled! At least my waste of the domain would have been funny, not greedy.
I notice three super cool points on this immediately:
(if they can make the battery-life detector accurate *and* the sloshing feedback accurate, of course)
Conceivably, the sloshing technique could become preferable to the battery icon.