I guess that "opaque" part is one of the reasons I don't use it. I want to know what my PW manager is doing, have it display in an intuitive manner, and do way more than keep up with just passwords. As I mentioned, it is starting to take over my favorite bookmark manager, URLMPro. I never used the built-in bookmark managers in any browser since they all had different, complicated methods of 'syncing' with another browser. URLMPro can be used in any and every browser because it is completely separate and always available since it 'lives' in the OS Menu Bar.
1PW Mini also resides in the OS Menu Bar so it can automatically open a site's password page
and insert the needed info just by my typing a few letters of the site's '
name' (which can be anything I want to use). Now I don't need to use URLMPro to first go to the site! Then select the info from 1PW's offerings.
I have several sites that require usernames/ID on one page, the p/w on another, a security question (among several that will come up randomly) and even a PIN. Fortunately 1PW (and probably other p/w managers) display all these items in a simple list with descriptions/labels that
I create. Even if someone were to "borrow" my computer, they'd still have trouble figuring out what info goes with which page/site. Keychain's p/w is the same as your Admin p/w, as far as I know. Maybe that's changed. 1PW adds another layer of protection since its p/w word is completely different. Of course, the down side is that I now have to remember TWO passwords; the computer Admin p/w
and the 1PW p/w!
I'm seriously glad you are using a password creator and that it does what you need. There are too many (like my wife, until a few years ago!) who simply use the same, short, insecure but easily remembered "password"!
She now uses 1PW. If I even asked her to open Keychain, I'd be cooking for my self for several weeks!
OTOH, I could stand to drop some weight...
Ain't it great to have choices?!