I endorse the serious note—I have a key layout I use for throwaway passwords based on taking an initial character from the website name, which is quick and easy to type on keyboards (but admittedly hard on iPhone). Eg I went back to confused.com (insurance comparison site) recently after a year and got in with a couple of guesses.
Emphasise throwaway passwords though—I use XKCD method for anything that gives control over other stuff (Gmail especially) but it takes some cognitive load off the unimportant stuff while still protecting against password leaks.
I endorse the serious note—I have a key layout I use for throwaway passwords based on taking an initial character from the website name, which is quick and easy to type on keyboards (but admittedly hard on iPhone). Eg I went back to confused.com (insurance comparison site) recently after a year and got in with a couple of guesses.
Emphasise throwaway passwords though—I use XKCD method for anything that gives control over other stuff (Gmail especially) but it takes some cognitive load off the unimportant stuff while still protecting against password leaks.