- The ATM.
- Checking and Savings Accounts.
- Retirement accounts.
- 27 email accounts each have a separate password.
- A password for the product that contains all of my passwords.
- My gym locker.
- The alarm code/password.
- A password to access the computer.
- Cellphone, office and homephone voicemail passwords.
How crazy is that. I can remember the 1,654,365 individual passwords but not something as simple as password. So you might be interested in learning how I determine what is going to be my password. Well the answer is simple, I use a complex algorithm developed by The Shmata Queen and refined by yours truly to provide myself with a subset of digits that have been applied to the Euclidean hyperbola theory first extrapolated and postulated by Da Vinci and Galileo.
More to come.
7 comments:
See, I just use things that fill in my passwords automatically... and hope my computer never gets stolen. :)
and I thought I had way too many emails, all 5 of them. You sure top me there!
Ezzie,
That is one way of doing it.
Prag,
It wasn't my intent to gather so many, it just kind of happened. I only use a few of them regularly.
Ah ha! I followed your mathematical equation, and now I know every one of your 1.6 million passwords!
You'd better change them.
Q
use a complex algorithm developed by The Shmata Queen and refined by yours truly to provide myself with a subset of digits that have been applied to the Euclidean hyperbola theory first extrapolated and postulated by Da Vinci and Galileo.
Ahhh, you are turning me on! ;)
What a great post because it's so true. I started to keep a record of all my various accounts and passwords, but I lost it, so now I am S.O.L.
I try.
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