Indeed, I love pass. I found that the majority of the time, typing 'pass <servicename>' is faster than clicking through a GUI anyway, and far more convenient if I'm already in the terminal.
And on the web, all the other password managers have browser extensions to autofill data from their own database, but every common browser already does password storage and autofill natively. So once I grab a password from pass the browser remembers it anyway, making extensions unnecessary.
Oh, and the other thing I LOVE about pass is that because it uses GPG, the key encrypting all the data can be held in a nice portable smartcard, since GPG supports them directly, and it all just works when my smartcard is plugged in. I use a yubikey neo with openpgpcard applet for this and it's been great.
I did start writing an OS X dropdown menu for accessing my passwords from pass, but I haven't been in such a hurry to get it done because it doesn't seem all that necessary in practice :)
And on the web, all the other password managers have browser extensions to autofill data from their own database, but every common browser already does password storage and autofill natively. So once I grab a password from pass the browser remembers it anyway, making extensions unnecessary.
Oh, and the other thing I LOVE about pass is that because it uses GPG, the key encrypting all the data can be held in a nice portable smartcard, since GPG supports them directly, and it all just works when my smartcard is plugged in. I use a yubikey neo with openpgpcard applet for this and it's been great.
I did start writing an OS X dropdown menu for accessing my passwords from pass, but I haven't been in such a hurry to get it done because it doesn't seem all that necessary in practice :)