Re: who's using what to store and generate passwords?
BitWarden can store passwords, addresses, credit cards, secure notes, and even files up to 200 MB, so you will never lose your scanned ID card, your license file, or whatever you wish to store again. All of this is encrypted locally and sent to the server you are syncing with. The task of a BW server is to sync across clients, store encrypted data, and to provide a web interface, if you do not have a client installed.
The advantage is that your data is hosted wherever you wish, unless you are using their hosted version. You have various clients on various platforms, various browser extensions, Android and iOS clients, etc. BitWarden even integrates with iOS's password autofill, so you can disable keychain and use BW exclusively.
On top of that, you have organizations, so you can have a shared vault for your family, friends, etc. You don't have to worry about generating passwords, since BW has a generator built in, though this is considered normal nowadays.
If the server ever goes down, your data is still available on your devices, so you can export it, or switch to a different server. If you wish to switch to BW, it can import from a lot of password managers, including 1Password, Keepass, LastPass, Firefox, Gnome Keyring, etc.
All this sounds like marketing hype, but to be honest, I don't think there is anything else out there that is on par with the features you get with BitWarden.
We have recently reported and received some accessibility enhancements, as well.
This hopefully gives you an idea of its capabilities.
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