KeePass Password Safe Portable 1.15 Released

John T. Haller's picture
Submitted by John T. Haller on February 21, 2009 - 4:17pm

KeePass logoKeePass Password Safe Portable 1.15 has been released. It's the secure, easy-to-use Keepass password manager packaged as a portable app, so you can securely take your email, internet, banking and other passwords with you. This new release updates the included KeePass to 1.15 and has a new multilingual installer with support for 40 languages. It's packaged in PortableApps.com Format for easy use from any portable device and integration with the PortableApps.com Suite. And it's open source and completely free.

Read on for more details...

Features

KeePass Portable ScreenshotKeePass is a free/open-source password manager or safe which helps you to manage your passwords in a secure way. You can put all your passwords in one database, which is locked with one master key or a key-disk. So you only have to remember one single master password or insert the key-disk to unlock the whole database. The databases are encrypted using the best and most secure encryption algorithms currently known (AES-256 and Twofish). Learn more about KeePass....

New In This Release

This release updates KeePass to the latest release (release notes) and has a new multilingual installer with support for 40 languages.

PortableApps.com Installer / PortableApps.com Format

KeePass is packaged in a PortableApps.com Installer so it will automatically detect an existing PortableApps.com installation when your drive is plugged in. And it's in PortableApps.com Format, so it automatically works with the PortableApps.com Suite including the Menu and Backup Utility.

Download

KeePass Portable is available for immediate download from the KeePass Portable homepage. Get it today!

Story Topic:

Comments

horusofoz's picture

Thanks John Smile

PS. I thought the developer had moved to using .NET. Is he still producing a non-.NET version as well now or is this just one of the last releases?

PortableApps.com Advocate

John T. Haller's picture

He'll be doing both. The .NET version is a beta and far less popular.

Sometimes, the impossible can become possible, if you're awesome!