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Hack facebook whole new way
Hack Facebook(whole new ways)
I (fb.com/100002272939308) have hacked many facebook id's really. What ways I used are given below:-
1. Guessing the security question. There should be a pattern and logic to guess the security questions . This is top trick of me. I have hacked over 10-12 facebook ID's by guessing security question.
2. Hacking the primary account. Some times, primary accounts are more unsecured. Rediffmail is most of unsecured and gmail is most secured.
3. Phishing. Doesn't work much, i would say, it just works against people who don't have much computer knowledge.
4. If you can't hack an account then you can simply block it for a month. I have created more than 50 email accounts on facebook, so if I block single user with all those accounts, that user will be blocked for a month.
contact me at fb.com/100002272939308, if I can hack the account, I will do it. But I am not an expert, I will just try it. I will do my best and chances are 50% that I will succeed.
I am developing a phishing app, which will send the username and password on your email without acknowledgement of victim. but i am having a problem in last step. the code the send a simple email.
if you can help me, you are welcome.
Hacking will be much easier then.
fore more: subscribe my blog, or subscribe me at:fb.com/100002272939308
If you need any game, software, antivirus or anithing on internet, just message me. i will get it in just a moment.
This is ok for today, meet you tomorrow.
Aliens existance.
Aliens... Do they exist?
We have not discovered even 0.000000001% of the whole universe, and you are saying aliens do not exist!!!
well if you thing so, let me tell you. NASA once got a signal from millions of light years far. that signal was called 'wow signal'. The Wow! signal was a strong narrowband radio signal detected by Jerry R. Ehman on August 15, 1977, while working on a SETI project at the Big Ear radio telescope of The Ohio State University then located at Ohio Wesleyan University's Perkins Observatory, Delaware, Ohio. Source:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wow!_signal;
This are not photoshop. these are real pictures. But never shown on T.V., neither publicized. But the organism you are seeing could not be researched on.
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| Could not be researched |
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| No Infoamation |
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Nasa is searching life beyond our earth.
Microbes are the most common form of life on Earth, and it is supposed that we will discover them on another planet.
Firefox galaxy
Galaxy that is much like firefox browser has been found.
About 20,000 light years from the Sun, right near the edge of the Milky Way Galaxy, sits V838 Monocerotis, a red variable star. Does it remind you of something? Of course it does: it resembles one of the world’s most famous Internet browser: FireFox.
It’s actually the variable star V838 Monocerotis near our Milky Way Galaxy. We personally think it’s actually a sign from Heaven for everyone to stop using Internet Explorer.
This shot was taken by the Hubble space telescope on February 8, 2004, just a few weeks after the FireFox logo we all came to know and love was originally designed.
So the question remains: Is the resemblance purely fortuitous or are there deeper mysteries inside the famous red panda logo?
Rapidly brightening objects like novae and supernovae are known to produce a phenomenon known as light echo. The light that travels directly from the object arrives first. If there are clouds of interstellar matter around the star, some light is reflected from the clouds. Because of the longer path, the reflected light arrives later, producing a vision of expanding rings of light around the erupted object.
In the case of V838 Monocerotis, the light echo produced was unprecedented and is well documented in images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope. While the photos appear to depict an expanding spherical shell of debris, they are actually formed by the illumination of an ever-expanding ellipsoid with the progenitor star at one focus and the observer at the other. Hence, despite appearances, the structures in these photos are actually concave toward the viewer. In other words, the light is reflecting dust that is mostly 'behind' the star, not in 'front' of it.
About 20,000 light years from the Sun, right near the edge of the Milky Way Galaxy, sits V838 Monocerotis, a red variable star. Does it remind you of something? Of course it does: it resembles one of the world’s most famous Internet browser: FireFox.
It’s actually the variable star V838 Monocerotis near our Milky Way Galaxy. We personally think it’s actually a sign from Heaven for everyone to stop using Internet Explorer.
This shot was taken by the Hubble space telescope on February 8, 2004, just a few weeks after the FireFox logo we all came to know and love was originally designed.
So the question remains: Is the resemblance purely fortuitous or are there deeper mysteries inside the famous red panda logo?
Rapidly brightening objects like novae and supernovae are known to produce a phenomenon known as light echo. The light that travels directly from the object arrives first. If there are clouds of interstellar matter around the star, some light is reflected from the clouds. Because of the longer path, the reflected light arrives later, producing a vision of expanding rings of light around the erupted object.
In the case of V838 Monocerotis, the light echo produced was unprecedented and is well documented in images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope. While the photos appear to depict an expanding spherical shell of debris, they are actually formed by the illumination of an ever-expanding ellipsoid with the progenitor star at one focus and the observer at the other. Hence, despite appearances, the structures in these photos are actually concave toward the viewer. In other words, the light is reflecting dust that is mostly 'behind' the star, not in 'front' of it.
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Waterfox (firefox)
Waterfox was compiled with Intel's C++ Compiler with the following
optimisations: Intel's Math Library, SSE3, AVX for supported Intel processors, jemalloc,
Profile-Guided Optimisation and the /O3 switch.
Your add-ons/extensions work on any version of Firefox, on any platform!
That means they all work with Waterfox. On the other hand, only 64-Bit plugins work with Waterfox
and as of now those are: Adobe Flash, Oracle Java and Microsoft Silverlight.
If you find any bugs that you think are related to Waterfox only,
report them in the Help section. If you think it's a bug relating to Firefox, then
reproduce it on there and file a bug report to Mozilla.
Download it here: http://www.waterfoxproject.org/download.php
Facebook primary id
I will not discuss it too long but I will tell you the main topic what you came for.
As you know, to create ID on Facebook you need an email ID on Gmail, yahoo, rediffmail or any other host. That host provides you primary ID. When you login to Facebook you with email ID, that ID is the primary ID.
Facebook uses that only for login purpose, but, it officially uses a FBID, which stands for Facebook ID. According to Facebook you are an object, and not only you everything on Facebook is an object, and each object has a unique ID.
This ID can be used by both users and Facebook. If you somehow got your or anybody's FBID you can refer him/her.
As you know, to create ID on Facebook you need an email ID on Gmail, yahoo, rediffmail or any other host. That host provides you primary ID. When you login to Facebook you with email ID, that ID is the primary ID.
Facebook uses that only for login purpose, but, it officially uses a FBID, which stands for Facebook ID. According to Facebook you are an object, and not only you everything on Facebook is an object, and each object has a unique ID.
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