You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Most of the time, we should store our passwords in password managers and not memorize them.
But there are a small number of passwords that you really need to have committed to memory:
first and foremost, of course, the master password for your password manager
the PIN code for your bank
the unlock code for your mobile devices
the password to the email account where the unlock codes
All of these codes should be rotated at least somewhat regularly, but doing
the work of re-memorizing these is super annoying and often we just don't
bother.
The Solution
Rather than write down a password and rely on the process of needing to
actually unlock your devices, PINPal provides a spaced-repetition prompt to try
to help you remember them as you're working on a computer.
Security
Since PINPal's job is to help you manage your most sensitive secrets, it
behooves it to treat its data very carefully.
Currently PINPal stores all secrets using the Python keyring
module, and gradually forgets the
password as you make progress in memorizing it.
Usage
To start memorizing a new secret,
$ pinpal new
and you'll be prompted to label the new secret.
To check up on your secrets and get prompted to recite them, simply run
$ pinpal
You will want to add
pinpal check
to something that is run frequently. I have it in my shell prompt. This will
tell you when you need to run pinpal.