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The Password SongGeneral informationShowsMy Friends Tigger & PoohAlbumsTigger & Pooh and a Musical TooComposerAndy SturmerLyricsAndy Sturmer & Brian HohlfeldPerformersJim CummingsPreceded by\"The Grass is Greenier\"Followed by\"Underneath the Same Sky\"VideoSource\"The Password Song\" (sometimes listed as simply \"Password Song\") is a song from the My Friends Tigger & Pooh movie, Tigger & Pooh and a Musical Too. In the film, Tigger and Rabbit have each declared themselves mayor of their respective sides of the Hundred Acre Wood. Rabbit establishes a password that can be used to cross over to his side, with Beaver as gatekeeper. Tigger thinks that he might be able to guess the password, but is unsuccessful, despite trying in word or song what he describes as every word he knows, and even some he doesn't. The song features music by Andy Sturmer, with lyrics by Sturmer and Brian Hohlfeld.
About a year ago, I developed a WordPress extension called WP Login Attempt Log. All it does is log every incorrect login attempt to your WordPress page and display some graphics and a way to search the logs. It logs the username, the password, the IP address and also the user agent, e.g. the browser version.
All in all, there's about 36,000 unique passwords that have been used to brute-force my WordPress blog. From the total number of around 360,000 attacks, each password must is used on average of 10 times. But of course, some are used more than others, as you can see in the table below.
WordPress hackers are really sure that you'll use a pretty standard username, or at least something to do with the name of your blog. A total of just 165 different usernames were tried, compared to the tens of thousands of passwords.
Therefore my final takeaway is to choose an obscure username as well as an obscure password. There's only 11 usernames that have been used more than a hundred times. This was kind of surprising to me.
Bottom line: Set a lengthy password consisting of random characters, letters and digits, and use a username that's not a part of your name, site URL or \"admin\". Maybe just use some random letters, your password manager will remember it after all.
Australians lose more money to investment scams than any other. They can be hard to spot, so before investing always seek independent legal advice or financial advice from a financial advisor who is registered with ASIC.
Related news Consumers warned about fake investment opportunities as losses top $20m 3 Aug 2022 Australians are losing more money to investment scams 6 Jun 2022 Australians lose over $70 million to bogus investment opportunities 24 Aug 2021 Culturally and linguistically diverse community lose $22 million to scams in 2020, reports from Indigenous Australians up by 25 per cent 10 Jun 2021 Scammers capitalise on pandemic as Australians lose record $851 million to scams 7 Jun 2021 View more news & alerts
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A study published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology shows that people would rather have fewer choices than more because it makes the decision process more manageable. Ultimately, with a smaller restaurant menu size, you give people what they want, improving customer service and their experience.
This comes with another benefit: it reduces food waste for a more sustainable and environmentally friendly restaurant. Many of your customers will appreciate your care for the planet, which will give you great publicity.
Paradoxically, one of the main benefits of a simple menu is that you can appeal to more customers while only serving a few dishes. How By customizing as many menu items as possible for different diets and intolerances. For instance, you can sell vegetarian and gluten-free options for your main dishes.
Tap into some menu psychology tricks to boost your profits. People are attracted to limited-edition items, and they will be more tempted to try a dish that will only be around for a short while.
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Hello! Could someone send me the clothes for the recipes for the fall clothing line sincerely I cannot buy anymore of the deluxe clothes to solve the recipes I you would, I would greatly appreciate it. My username is AbbyLC2007. Thank you so much!
But compared to in-person events, virtual events have a notoriously high no-show rate.In fact, according to a recent study by Heinz Marketing, only 39% of B2B professionals see a typical attendance rate of more than 50% for virtual events.
As the title says, I've been playing a lotta Steam games. When the pandemic started, I had six games at 100% Steam achievements, on an account in constant use since 2005 - or, more relevantly, whenever the hell Steam added achievements. I like how the PS calls it platinum, so I'll probably use that as the term for the rest of this thread. In 2014 I platted Orcs Must Die! 2 and then Dark Souls; in 2015 I added Risk of Rain, Dark Souls 2, and Cook! Serve! Delicious! to that list. Starting at my sixth plat game (Beat Hazard) in 2017, there's a long break, and then lockdown started and I got sent to WFH and had a lot of free time not commuting, being in meetings where nobody could see me, waiting for simulations to run and not going to bother coworkers, suchlike.
I waffled on starting up a blog or something but this does the dual purpose of getting me off my ass to check SF more often, so I'm just gonna toss it in here and post in it when I want to. Noted epic moderator Parrhesia usually gets the bulk of my thoughts, but I think a structured writing exercise like this will keep things fresh and interesting for me.
You're killing vikings, right The top tier killing vikings achievement is for killing 15,000 vikings. It's a meaningless number without context, so here's the context: if you deploy multiple times per round, on the absolute top difficulty (which floods you in vikings), and play perfectly, an entire campaign (5 hours or so) might crest 3,000 kills. Now, playing the whole game six or seven times through isn't a particularly outlandish question to ask - this exact thing will come up later and way worse - but with the context that everything else is pretty achievable in two campaigns or three at most, it begins to look a little silly to have more full runs of the game just farming up the kill number than you actually had to do to get everything else combined. I ended up churning out campaigns where I'd just pick pikemen, take early maps with only melee enemies, and watch movies while the vikings died on my spears instead of playing the game after my fourth full clear.
Scholar's a bit more of a contentious beast, even for me. I thought Scholar was generally fantastic, but it also feels like a Kaizo hack of Dark Souls 2 rather than a remix/rebalance. While I loved it, I genuinely can't imagine someone picking up Scholar as their first Souls game and having a good time. I wish it had existed as, like, you go through Dark Souls 2 and, when you NG+ it, you get Scholar's remixed harder world. That would have been sick. It's my favorite entry in the Souls games, but with a big fat * next to the word 'favorite'.
Hidden Weapon unlocks as the middle tier of the Bell Keepers covenant, and no other place in the game at all. The Bell Keepers inhabit two optional zones in the game and let you engage in the shitter of the two asymmetrical PvP modes in the game (the other, the Rat King covenant, owns bones). Hidden Weapon is awarded to you for vanquishing 30 bell tower invaders, which typically means going to other players' worlds and killing them. 60 invasions, assuming you're batting even, is a bit of a thing to ask, but what if there aren't any more players to invade, for instance if the servers are offline because of a massive security hole The failsafe in this case is the Mad Warrior. The Mad Warrior spawns sometimes (estimates vary from 7 to about 15% every time you rest) in one of the two towers (there's a parallel guy in the other tower but he's a pain in the ass). It's a good 15 or so seconds of walking from the nearest checkpoint before you can see if he spawned this time or not, and if he did you still have to kill the bastard. The best method for farming him is to literally have Task Manager up and write down your resting memory usage, and see if it spikes when you walk into the tower, and that usually lets you know if he spawned or not. It's absolutely fucking ridiculous. It's the only time in all of the games that I've voluntarily done PvP because the alternative was so awful.
FTL: Faster Than Light is a spacefaring roguelike, and it's an incredibly good game with a single questionable design decision in it. Slightly unfortunate that that questionable design decision is the final boss itself, but it's questionable at least, and not just bad. Some disagree with me, and they have good points, but this is my soapbox. There's a delightful amount of variety to how you can approach the game within its pretty-simple framework, although not all strategies are even close to created equal. It's quick to play, it's snappy to respond, there's a lot of heart and soul in it, and I've bought it probably five times. There's not many games I recommend more. 781b155fdc