As mentioned in the FAQ, all versions of Cryptnos do (or will) store all your password generating parameters, with the important exception of your master password. The master password is NEVER stored, and neither is it ever checked for validity. Cryptnos has no concept of whether you master password is “right” or “wrong”; it’s just [...]
We have a report of what seems to be major bug in the update notification code in the recently released Cryptnos for Windows 1.1. If after installation you get a rather cryptic “Object reference not set to an instance of an object” error that prevents Cryptnos for ever starting, you’ve likely encountered it. It does [...]
I’m extremely happy to announce that Cryptnos 1.1 is now available for download, both for Windows and Android. Android users should be getting update notifications from the Android Market any time now. Windows users, of course, will be forced update manually… for now, at least. More on that in a bit. I won’t rehash too [...]
Following on the update to the previous post, now I should announce that work is under way on version 1.1 for both Android and Windows. Actually, I think 1.1 for Windows is close to finished, but I’m not ready to release it quite yet. I want to get started on 1.1 for Android, test them [...]
One of the main goals I’ve always had for Cryptnos has been as much cross-platform compatibility as possible. As far as I can tell, so long as you always use the same text encoding on every platform, Cryptnos always generates the same password, regardless of whether you are using .NET, Android, or Java. That’s our [...]
This was “officially” announced on my personal blog, Neural Core Dump, back on March 23rd, 2010, but for completeness, here’s our official Cryptnos.com announcement. We’re proud to announce that Cryptnos 1.0 for .NET is available for download. You can find the links on the Cryptnos for Windows page. I won’t rehash all the introductory stuff [...]