RSA SECUREPC - traduzione in olandese
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RSA SECUREPC - traduzione in olandese

SET OF LARGE SEMIPRIMES
RSA number; RSA-130; RSA-140; RSA-155; RSA-160; RSA-576; RSA-129; RSA-150; RSA-100; RSA-110; RSA-120; RSA-640; RSA-704; RSA-768; RSA-896; RSA-1024; RSA-1536; RSA-2048; RSA-170; RSA-180; RSA-190; RSA-200; RSA-210; RSA-220; RSA-230; RSA-232; RSA-240; RSA-250; RSA-260; RSA-270; RSA-280; RSA-290; RSA-300; RSA-309; RSA-310; RSA-320; RSA-330; RSA-340; RSA-350; RSA-360; RSA-370; RSA-380; RSA-390; RSA-400; RSA-410; RSA-420; RSA-430; RSA-440; RSA-450; RSA-460; RSA-470; RSA-480; RSA-490; RSA-500; RSA-617; FAFNER; Rivest-Shamir-Adleman Number; Kazumaro Aoki

RSA SECUREPC      
programmering voor ingevoerde bestanden dat mogelijkheid biedt tot gezamenlijk gebruik van de bestanden op het bureau
South-Africa         
  • [[Zulus]] performing a traditional dance
  • The female [[African Leopard]] "Thandi" in the Djuma concession of the [[Sabi Sand Game Reserve]]
  • anti-apartheid]] activist and writer
  • "For use by white persons" – apartheid sign in English and Afrikaans
  • The [[Battle of Majuba Hill]] was the last decisive battle during the [[First Boer War]], and saw the British defeated by the Boers after 2 hours of fighting.
  • British concentration camp]] during the [[Second Boer War]].
  • Springboks]] on their tour of the country after winning the [[2019 Rugby World Cup]]
  • 1876 map of South Africa
  • [[Charles Davidson Bell]]'s 19th-century painting of [[Jan van Riebeeck]], who founded the first European settlement in South Africa, arrives in [[Table Bay]] in 1652
  • Zulu attack]] on a Boer camp in February 1838
  • Portuguese explorer [[Bartolomeu Dias]] planting the cross at [[Cape Point]] after being the first to successfully round the [[Cape of Good Hope]].
  • [[Cape Floral Region Protected Areas]]
  • F.W. de Klerk]] and [[Nelson Mandela]] shake hands in January 1992
  • higher-speed]] commuter rail
  • Ceres Valley]], Western Cape
  • language=en}}</ref>
  • website=www.tradinghours.com}}</ref>
  • Koeberg Power Station]], the only [[nuclear power plant]] on the entire African continent
  • language=en}}</ref>
  • President of South Africa, [[Cyril Ramaphosa]] (far left), poses with the [[BRICS]] heads of state and government during the [[11th BRICS summit]], 2019
  • Life expectancy in select Southern African countries, 1950–2019. [[HIV/AIDS]] has caused a fall in life expectancy.
  • The [[Nelson Mandela Bridge]] in [[Johannesburg]]
  • [[Provinces of South Africa]]
  • [[Mapungubwe Hill]], the site of the former capital of the [[Kingdom of Mapungubwe]]
  • [[Mark Shuttleworth]] in space
  • [[MyCiTi]] Bus in [[Cape Town]]
  • Spring flowers in [[Namaqualand]]
  • March in [[Johannesburg]] against [[xenophobia in South Africa]], 23 April 2015
  • An aerial view of the [[Two Rivers mine]] in [[Steelpoort]], [[Limpopo]], owned by both African Rainbow Minerals and Impala Platinum holdings limited.
  • Rock painting]] by the [[San people]], [[Cederberg]]
  • Smash and Grab Hot Spot sign in [[Retreat, Cape Town]]
  • [[Cape Town Stadium]] is the 5th-largest stadium in South Africa, with a capacity of 55,000
  • Great Escarpment]] which surrounds the east, south and western borders of the central plateau.
  • Areas of little or no population}}
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  • &gt;3000 /km<sup>2</sup>}}}}
  • Köppen climate types]] of South Africa
  • A proportional representation of South African exports, 2019
  • frameless
  • [[South African Airways]] [[Airbus A340]] at [[Munich Airport]]
  • [[South African giraffe]]s, Kruger National Park
  • Vektor R5]] rifles on parade in Johannesburg, 2010
  • Parow, Cape Town]]
  • The [[University of Cape Town]]
  • [[Union Buildings]] in Pretoria, seat of the executive
  • suburb of Johannesburg]]
  • frameless
COUNTRY IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
Zuid Africa; Republic of South Africa; ISO 3166-1:ZA; Suid-Afrika; Ningizimu Afrika; Azania/South Africa; South Africa's; Zuidafrika; S. Africa; South africa; Third Republic (South Africa); Zuid-Afrika; Republic of south africa; Southafrica; Suid Africa; Zuid Afrika; Seth efrika; Capital of South Africa; Afrique du sud; South-Africa; The Republic of South Africa; South-African; Mzansi; Republiek van Suid-Afrika; S Africa; Soufrica; Sou'frica; Rep. of SOUTH AFRICA; Rep. of South Africa; S Afr; Repabliki ya Afrika-Borwa; Rephaboliki ya Afrika Borwa; IRiphabliki yeSuwela Afrika; IRiphabhulikhi yeNingizimu Afrika; Riphabliki ra Afrika Dzonga; Rephaboliki ya Aforika Borwa; Riphabuḽiki ya Afurika Tshipembe; Rephabuliki ya Afurika Tshipembe; IRiphabliki yomZantsi Afrika; IRiphabhuliki yaseNingizimu Afrika; Conservation issues in South Africa; Iningizimu Afrika; Mzantsi Afrika; SouthAfrica; Republic South Africa; South Africa Act 1962
Zuid-Afrika (het zuidelijkste land in het afrikaans werelddeel)

Definizione

RSA Data Security, Inc.
<cryptography, company> (After Rivest, Shamir, Adleman - see RSA) A recognised world leader in cryptography, with millions of copies of its software encryption and authentication installed and in use worldwide. RSA's technologies are the global de facto standard for {public key cryptography} and digital signatures, and are part of existing and proposed standards for the Internet, ITU-T, ISO, ANSI, PKCS, IEEE and business and financial networks around the world. http://rsa.com/. (1994-12-08)

Wikipedia

RSA numbers

In mathematics, the RSA numbers are a set of large semiprimes (numbers with exactly two prime factors) that were part of the RSA Factoring Challenge. The challenge was to find the prime factors of each number. It was created by RSA Laboratories in March 1991 to encourage research into computational number theory and the practical difficulty of factoring large integers. The challenge was ended in 2007.

RSA Laboratories (which is an acronym of the creators of the technique; Rivest, Shamir and Adleman) published a number of semiprimes with 100 to 617 decimal digits. Cash prizes of varying size, up to US$200,000 (and prizes up to $20,000 awarded), were offered for factorization of some of them. The smallest RSA number was factored in a few days. Most of the numbers have still not been factored and many of them are expected to remain unfactored for many years to come. As of February 2020, the smallest 23 of the 54 listed numbers have been factored.

While the RSA challenge officially ended in 2007, people are still attempting to find the factorizations. According to RSA Laboratories, "Now that the industry has a considerably more advanced understanding of the cryptanalytic strength of common symmetric-key and public-key algorithms, these challenges are no longer active." Some of the smaller prizes had been awarded at the time. The remaining prizes were retracted.

The first RSA numbers generated, from RSA-100 to RSA-500, were labeled according to their number of decimal digits. Later, beginning with RSA-576, binary digits are counted instead. An exception to this is RSA-617, which was created before the change in the numbering scheme. The numbers are listed in increasing order below.