Fill Web forms quickly with Sxipper
(Credit:
Sxip Identity Corporation)
Like most webware fans, I love to play with the cool features at sites such as Splice, Jumpcut, and the like, but most of these Web 2.0 ventures require registration, which in turn requires filling out forms and tracking passwords and log-ins. It's not only Web-based applications and community sites. I often get most frustrated when buying airline tickets or holiday gifts through new online vendors. Typing out my entire address and credit card information is fine a few times, but I have lots of relatives, and the 23rd form gets to be a bit tiring.
In the past, software solutions have filled the gap admirably. One excellent product is Siber System's RoboForm, which provides a robust platform for managing your personal information, all encrypted via AES, BlowFish, or 3DES. While RoboForm is a great program, the amount of information and passwords you can manage is limited for those of us cheapskates not willing to shell out $30 for the full version. The open-source application KeePass is great for securely storing passwords, but it doesn't fill out forms automatically.
Now, a new Firefox extension called Sxipper (pronounced "skipper") aims to improve on that browser's password-management features with a free, secure system for automatically adding your personal information and passwords to Web sites. On installation, Sxipper scours your address book and Firefox preferences for passwords and information you've already saved. It then walks you through a wizard that explains the privacy policy and end-license user agreement, lets you select your personal icon, and asks you to enter basic personal information for your profile.
(Credit:
CNET Networks)
After a brief, optional demo from the Sxipper site, you're off and running. If you land on a Web form that's in the Sxipper system, a prompt with your icon will ask if you want to "Sxip this." You'll then be provided with a Sxip dialog that lets you specify which of your personal information you want to add to the form. On page with a log-in form, you can choose which account you'd like to use and then automatically log in. When you visit a form that isn't in the Sxipper database, you can add it to the program's "semantic map" for other users. That map will then be credited with your username. (Register for Splice with Sxip and you should see a "Sxipped by peterb" note at the top of the prompt.)
Though it's still in beta, one obvious problem with Sxipper arises when you've got a log-in page such as Digg's that forces you to complete a randomized CAPTCHA form. Unlike RoboForm, Sxipper currently has no option of adding your log-in and password to the form without automatically entering it, resulting in a CAPTCHA error. Another downside is you can't manually add maps to the system. The only way to add them is to set your Preferences to "Auto Prompt Map Creation," which will prompt you on every form that Sxipper doesn't recognize. The problem there is you might have HTML-based forms you use regularly for various purposes. You don't want to have to cancel the Sxipper prompt each time you visit those forms.
(Credit:
CNET Networks)
Those are both easy issues to fix. Sxipper should add a option to its taskbar icon that lets you manually add a map and a selection to its autoprompt mapping feature that says "No, and don't ask me about this form again." Aside from small bugs and necessary improvements, most of the Sxipper preferences such as changing your map attribution and saving your personal data to a backup file are nonfunctional. In fact, some of the options don't even fit within the preferences pop-up window. You can see what the Sxipper team is up to next with its release notes for the latest version.






Indeed with increasing need for more security, one has to use user ID and password more and more. But what is more, that I cannot find back in the review of Sxipper is that none of the tools have one important feature: dynamic update.
It is our company's policy that every three months we need to use another password to log in to our workstation. I noticed that many intranet pages then requires an update. So now after changing the password there is an annoying avalanche of pop-ups asked pass word plus confirmation. The ideal tool is not yet invented.
Indeed with increasing need for more security, one has to use user ID and password more and more. But what is more, that I cannot find back in the review of Sxipper is that none of the tools have one important feature: dynamic update.
It is our company's policy that every three months we need to use another password to log in to our workstation. I noticed that many intranet pages then requires an update. So now after changing the password there is an annoying avalanche of pop-ups asked pass word plus confirmation. The ideal tool is not yet invented.
1 -- It has essentially NO DOCUMENTATION
2 -- It's "preferences" button does nothing
3 -- It's "mapper" function does not work, and, specifically, does not allow the user to add fields that it doesn't find.
4 -- It locks up Firefox 2.0 entirely in some circumstances.
This product should not properly be designated a "beta." It's nothing more than alpha software -- well intentioned but virtually useless at this point.
I'd strongly advise NOT installing it.
1 -- It has essentially NO DOCUMENTATION
2 -- It's "preferences" button does nothing
3 -- It's "mapper" function does not work, and, specifically, does not allow the user to add fields that it doesn't find.
4 -- It locks up Firefox 2.0 entirely in some circumstances.
This product should not properly be designated a "beta." It's nothing more than alpha software -- well intentioned but virtually useless at this point.
I'd strongly advise NOT installing it.
Joe
Joe
If you wanna be different, be prepared to pay the price.
--C
If you wanna be different, be prepared to pay the price.
--C
One of the many great features of the suite is its convenient password management system. Whenever I have to register (as I did to post this comment), Seamonkey asks me if I want to remember the values I used. The choices are yes, no, and never for this site. If I click the yes box, the information (in this case, my email address and password) are added to my profile's collection, which is encrypted and protected by a single strong password that has to be entered each time Seamonkey is started. Once that's done, any login or password information required for a page is automatically filled in for me when I load it. If there are more than set of data - like a web mail page where I have multiple accounts - Seamonkey displays a box with all the choices. I click the identity I want to use, and that data is entered. It doesn't click the login button itself, so I can always remove the data and change it or create a new login if I want.
If I need to know what my password is, the database is viewable under preferences/privacy/passwords - click the manage button, and enter the master password when prompted to see the actual passwords used for each email account, web site, or whatever.
This system has worked flawlessly for me since I first discovered it, and it's an integral part of the suite that doesn't require separate installation or use added resources.
Jim
- Use Mozilla's built in password manager
- by jfsayre December 13, 2006 11:19 AM PST
- I've only occasionally used Firefox itself, but I've been a Mozilla suite user since its early versions, and now use Seamonkey. I'm almost positive the features described below are also present in Firefox and Thunderbird; but since they're separate programs, there would be separate master passwords to control them.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
-
- ...and loose your passwords to a hacker.
- by Ryo Hazuki December 14, 2006 6:08 AM PST
- Let us remember that comes from the same company that gave us the built-in password manager in Firefox 2 that was hacked. And we all imagine how interesting it must be to loose all our passwords to a hacker.
- Like this
-
(20 Comments)One of the many great features of the suite is its convenient password management system. Whenever I have to register (as I did to post this comment), Seamonkey asks me if I want to remember the values I used. The choices are yes, no, and never for this site. If I click the yes box, the information (in this case, my email address and password) are added to my profile's collection, which is encrypted and protected by a single strong password that has to be entered each time Seamonkey is started. Once that's done, any login or password information required for a page is automatically filled in for me when I load it. If there are more than set of data - like a web mail page where I have multiple accounts - Seamonkey displays a box with all the choices. I click the identity I want to use, and that data is entered. It doesn't click the login button itself, so I can always remove the data and change it or create a new login if I want.
If I need to know what my password is, the database is viewable under preferences/privacy/passwords - click the manage button, and enter the master password when prompted to see the actual passwords used for each email account, web site, or whatever.
This system has worked flawlessly for me since I first discovered it, and it's an integral part of the suite that doesn't require separate installation or use added resources.
Jim