U+1F914 🤔
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U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What irritates you the most with your own language?English
0·3 years agoHow numbers are pronounced.
In German the number 185 is pronounced as “hundred-five-and-eighty” (hundertfünfundachtzig), the digits are not spoken in order of their magnitude.
Not terrible, not great.
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldOPto
Rust@programming.dev•Small Ferris on c/canvas@toast.oooEnglish
2·3 years agoA big thank you to @Aloso@programming.dev , @olicvb@lemmy.world and everyone I missed for contributing their pixels. 🦀
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Does Mnemonic Passcode more secure than normal password?English
1·3 years agodeleted by creator
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Does Mnemonic Passcode more secure than normal password?English
5·3 years agoThe security of a fully random password depends on the number of available symbols (alphabet) and the length.
The strength of the password is simplysymbolcount^length.For a conventional password the symbols/alphabet are characters, numbers and special characters.
For a mnemonic the symbols are simply full words and the “alphabet” is a list with a couple thousand words.Mnemonic passwords are secure because of their large alphabet, and easy to remember because of the lower length (in symbols) and because human brains are good at coming up with associations (usually stories) for random words.
If you want to generate your own mnemonic password you can try diceware.
With diceware you roll a few dice to select random words from a list.
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Rust@programming.dev•Experimenting with Iced - Simple but inefficient?English
2·3 years ago











OpenSuse Slowroll (rolling release with constant updates plus an update burst every two months)