Password typing fingers8/30/2023 ![]() Luckily mrAru is also vaguely multilingual and very patient, so sometimes listening to us when I am very tired or ill is somewhat existential. When I get aphasic, i cant speak in a single language, but my brain picks words at random from my various languages to ‘fill in the blanks’ in predominately english conversation. I can speak french, or english but I can’t translate between the languages without a lot of thought, and I have smatterings of spanish, italian, german, russian and japanese. I am dyslexic, with some aphasia when I am extremely tired or ill, and learned french in canada as a result of wanting to play with the local kids. Also I only remember the multiplication table in Japanese. Apparently I’d memorized my ZIP code as a sound in Japanese, since this particular number scans better in Japanese than English. The other day a store clerk asked for my ZIP code, and I couldn’t say it in English. When trying to remember which of two letters is first, I sometimes have to go back and sing the song from the beginning of a musical phrase in the song(A, H, Q, or W), to get the order.Īnother similar phenomenon is that even though I’m bilingual, I only remember certain things in one language and not the other. I don’t know if this is common, but I’m like this with the alphabet. It even works if I just think them silently to myself, so it’s not related to the activity of my muscles. I assume this is because saying each group of a few numbers reminds me what the next one is. Yet if you ask me to start in the middle, or force me to say them very slowly, I have a lot more trouble. ![]() For instance, I have 115 digits of pi memorized (don’t ask why), and I can recite them so quickly that I can sometimes get through all of them in a single breath. This doesn’t just hold for physical movements. So doing something makes you remember the last time you did it, which can trigger a memory of what you did immediately afterward. I’m not an expert on memory, but I assume this is because memories have some sort of structure associating certain ones with each other. Now take the next few minutes to recite the. So maybe typing the first couple keys reminds you of the rest of them. Creating a strong password can no longer be difficult as long as you can master our 5 finger password rule. With regard to the whole “motor memory” thing, it occurs to me that rather than being a different kind of memory, it could have something to do with the fact that an action (such as pressing a key) can trigger a memory. You don’t need to know your password at all – just where it starts. When your password expires, just move over to the “7” key and get &UJM7ygv. You get ^YHN6tfc which is a pretty strong password and meets most system password criteria. Hold down SHIFT and follow the diagonal line down and to the right, then let go of SHIFT and go down and to the left from “6”. I actually choose my passwords based on their “shape” rather than any defined string of letters or numbers.
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