...You could just as easily have it generate something of 8 characters, made up of just lower and upper-case letters, numbers, and basic symbols. Something like;
s6:ay$D(
That's 53 bits. Very secure. Less scary looking. You could even memorize those. I have about a dozen of them permanently engrained on my brain from past use, and would use those as a more secure alternative when I didn't use (and now I'm giving away old password habits, but it doesn't really matter) my rifle numbers from Parris Island and Camp LeJeune, or pistol number from Kaneohe Bay, which are only 24 bit in strength. Not so secure. Particularly since I used and re-used these everywhere for many years.
[sup]3[/sup] - To put that in perspective, we were generated passwords around 53-bit strength when working on DoD computers in ultra-secure SCIFs for NSA/SIGINT purposes. That was early 90's, I'm sure they use something stronger now (although 53 is pretty damn secure itself), but the point is that 508-bit is almost funny...