Securely

  • 71Public key infrastructure — In cryptography, a public key infrastructure (PKI) is an arrangement that binds public keys with respective user identities by means of a certificate authority (CA). The user identity must be unique for each CA. The binding is established through …

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  • 72Internet Information Services — Screenshot of IIS Manager console of Internet Information Services 7 Developer(s) Microsoft Stable release …

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  • 73Jizya — This article is part of the series …

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  • 74Button — For other uses, see button (disambiguation) and buttons (disambiguation). Wedgwood button with Boulton cut steels, depicting a mermaid family, England, circa 1760. Actual diameter: just over 32mm (1 1/4 ) …

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  • 75Emperor Gengshi of Han — Emperor Gengshi of Han, ch. 漢更始帝, py. gèng shĭ dì, wg. Keng Shih ti, (d. strangled AD 25), also known as the Prince of Huaiyang (淮陽王, the title that Emperor Guangwu (Liu Xiu) gave him in absentia after he was deposed by Chimei forces), courtesy… …

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  • 76Mulberry harbour — A Mulberry harbour was a British type of temporary harbour developed in World War II to offload cargo on the beaches during the Allied invasion of Normandy. A pair of Phoenixes at Portland Harbour Two prefabricated or artificial military harbours …

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  • 77Shoelaces — (also shoestrings, shoe laces or boot laces) are a system commonly used to secure shoes. The shoelace can be untied and loosened, permitting the shoe to open wide to admit the wearer s foot; it can then be tightened and knotted into a bow shaped… …

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  • 78Golden plates — In Latter Day Saint theology, the golden plates (also called the gold plates or in some 19th century literature, the golden Bible ) [Use of the terms golden bible and gold Bible by both believers and non believers dates from the late 1820s. See,… …

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  • 79United States Naval Research Laboratory — Naval Research Laboratory Emblem of the NRL Active 1923 present Country …

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  • 80Lavinium — was a Latin port city of Latium 30 km south of Rome, [The site of the city is the modern Practica di Mare.] already fortified in the seventh century BCE and a flourishing in the sixth. [Christopher John Smith, Early Rome and Latium: Economy and… …

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