A pass phrase is the same thing as a password or pass code. It is the key to accessing things that are locked on your computer.
passphrase
A passphrase is easier to remember than it is with a web-key, therefore easier to crack/break/guess.
The passphrase is "My dear friends, remember Navarro", but you can only learn this if you recruit Arcade Gannon and achieve the conditions needed to trigger his personal quest "For Auld Lang Syne".
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WPA-Personal
WPA-Personal
It's a secured password set to private home wifi networks, you can set up your wpa passphrase by going to "router IP address" (see related links) in your web browser and configuring your router settings. Corrections: You default IP address might be different. You did not specify brand and model of the router, thus we can only guess. Also WPA passphrase can be set in the security properties of wireless network(s) in router settings.
A WEP key is entered as a string of numbers and letters and is generally 64 bits or 128 bits long. In some cases, WEP supports 256 bit keys as well. To simplify creating and entering these keys, many devices include a Passphrase option. The passphrase is an easy way to remember the word or phrase used to automatically generate a key.
alibaba 1001 nights secret passphrase, sesame seeds burst open so that's probably the link
"Linux OS 2010" doesn't exist. The closest thing to a "folder with a pass word" in Linux is using something like EncFS. encfs encrypted decrypted Provide a passphrase when prompted. Then move the files you to keep encrypted to decrypted, and then unmount it with fusermount -u decrypted. To open it again, you run the first command again and supply the passphrase you gave the first time.
I dunno, ask the person who installed your computer/laptop. Its also in some manuals I dunno, ask the person who installed your computer/laptop. Its also in some manuals
Instead of using passwords, use passphrases. Passwords longer than twenty characters become harder for hackers to guess, and they take too long for a hacker to brute force. Upwards of thirty characters would take years to crack - the passphrase "ThisPasswordIsVeryDifficultToCrack" would take years to crack, but it's obvious. Trying a passphrase such as "HorseDogLlamaChickenOneHundredAndSixtyFourBlue" is not as difficult to remember as "£hwne&n8HG(^$J" but is just as secure.