Hi PMah,
I don't have any "actual experience" because I would never use those sites/apps that store passwords, etc. What is to stop someone from hacking in and stealing all of your passwords? In my mind, it seems like an incredibly stupid idea. This whole notion is ridiculous. It is bad enough when a hacker hacks into one of your sites. But can you imagine how catastrophic it would be if a hacker obtained all of your passwords? I am sure that the hackers know these sites/apps exist, and it probably makes them salivate. Just the thought that all of someone's passwords are stored in one site/app would give them tremendous incentive to attempt to hack into it.
Regarding accessing websites, as soon as I open my browser, Forum's icon appears, and I click on it and log in. The entire process (opening the browser, going to the site, and logging in) takes less than 5-10 seconds, and my computer is 5 1/2 years old. How much faster do you want to access these sites? Maybe it is just me and my age and generation. I am a GenXer. Compared to when I grew up (1970s and 1980s), today's speeds are lightening fast.
When I first became interested in computers and got my first computer (an Atari 400
home computer in circa 1981/1982), data was stored on a cassette tape (like a
music album). The internet was virtually non-existent, and I didn't have a modem, which was considered a
rare, exotic, and expensive "novelty" for wealthy people (which we weren't) in the early 1980s. I
had an Atari 410 cassette player that would download the file/program to my Atari 400
home computer. It literally took 30-45 minutes (
!!!!!) for one file/program to load. And that is if the loading process was successful on the first attempt and you didn't have to repeat the process because the loading attempt failed, which happened all too frequently.
"Back in my day..."
Meepzorp