Welcome my dear reader, a new day and a new iPhone tip waiting for you to check out. When you need to generate a random strong password for your iPhone then I recommend you to ask Siri. Yes, the voice assistant that lives in iOS. You won’t find this trick in Siri’s own listing of commands list, but it’s a piece of cake to use and quite powerful.
But why should I use this ? There are tons of examples where this is useful, but many will find this particularly helpful when you are at a machine without access toKeychain’s generation tool or even command line access, especially if you didn’t memorize or alias the proper command syntax to randomly generate one in the first place. Plus let’s face it, in many situations it’s just easier to ask Siri than it is to launch another app anyway.
So here’s how to generate strong random passwords using Siri:
If you want to generate a random password that consists of 8 characters long (default), just tell Siri the following sentence: “Random Password” Just like the following picture:
As you can see from the above picture, Siri’s response is an alphanumeric mixed cap of 8 characters, which while ok for many uses, the length is not ideal for many real world situations. For added security you can increase both complexity and overall strength simply by increasing the character length of the generated pass code.
Add Strength & Complexity By Increasing Character Length
You can get much more complex and generate stronger passwords though by specifying a character length as well, to do this just summon siri again and then say “random password 16 characters†like so:
Siri will respond to the query with a completely random password that is quite strong, consisting of random alphanumeric characters with mixed caps.
Siri is wise enough to not vocalize the password that has been created, preventing any nearby individuals from hearing the results, and thus keeping them even more secure and usable. And it’s also smart enough to offer the results in an easily speakable format if you need to relay the generated complex password to someone else over the phone (like saying Alpha Bravo for AB, to prevent misunderstandings and mismatches).
Generated Password Types
If you’re not happy with the initial password provided for some reason, a series of additional randomly generated character sequences are offered below under the “Additional passwords†heading. Scrolling all the way to the bottom will reveal even more randomly generated options of different password types, including:
- Case sensitive alphanumeric (letters and numbers, upper and lowercase) – this is the default and the strongest password type
- Numeric only (digits 0-9)
- Case insensitive alphabet only (a-z)
- Case insensitive alphanumeric combination
- Case sensitive alphabetic
- Case sensitive alphanumeric