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5 Steps Auto Posting Articles from Blogspot to Twitter

Blog and social media has become one of important tools for internet campaign. Integration between them will produce effective & efficient internet promotion.
Here 5 steps auto posting articles from Blogspot to Twitter, free:
1. Create new account at www.twitterfeed.com
2. Click on "Create New Feed"
3. Insert your Feed Name, RSS Feed URL and tick on Active part
Example:
- Feed Name: Lowongan Kerja Wow
- RSS Feed URL: http://lowongankerjawow.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default
Default RSS Feed URL from blogger is: http://NAMA_BLOG.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default - To ensure all steps is working properly, click on "test rss feed"
4. Click on "Advanced Settings" for additional features
- Define update frequency, and how many articles will be posted for every check.
- It's advisable to choose "title only" on "Post Content" part, to ensure it's fit with 145 chars policy from twitter.
- Tick on "Post Link", so followers can read the article more detail by clicking the link.
5. Process done, click on "All Done"
- Ensure "Active Services" on twitter has been ticked.
- If not, press "Twitter" on "Available Services" to validate.
- Click on "All done" at the bottom.
Done!
The 25 worst passwords of 2011: ‘password,’ ‘123456′

In spite of a constant drumbeat of news about hacking and cracking computer accounts, users still are employing extremely common and obvious phrases as passwords. A compilation of the most commonly used — and potentially most insecure — passwords seen over the past year was recently drawn up by Splashdata and reported in Mashable. Splashdata found that incredibly enough, the leading password in use today is the word “password.” Interestingly, number 4 on the list, the keyboard lineup of “qwerty,” is counterbalanced by item number 23, “qazwsx,” which is the first three rows of keys typed vertically.
The list closely parallels that developed close to two years ago by Imperva, showing that these terms never go out of vogue.
Here is this year’s list:
- password
- 123456
- 2345678
- qwerty
- abc123
- monkey
- 1234567
- letmein
- trustno1
- dragon
- baseball
- 111111
- iloveyou
- master
- sunshine
- ashley
- bailey
- passw0rd
- shadow
- 123123
- 654321
- superman
- qazwsx
- michael
- football
SmartPlanet colleague Tuan C. Nguyen provides a surprisingly simple technique for deriving a strong password that makes it difficult for hacking programs to arrive at the right brute force combination — employing a symbol in combination with an upper-case and lower-case letter.
Not everyone thinks that strong passwords are the answer, however. In another study on passwords, a Microsoft researcher conducted a cost/benefit analysis of efforts to encourage stronger passwords, and questions whether the costs of strong password management outweighs the benefits.
Original Source
By Joe McKendrick | November 18, 2011, 9:54 PM PST








