Is it really so easy to hack into someone's email account?
I've practically hacked my own email accounts a number of times. I end up forgetting the passwords and trying a brute force attack with several variants of the password. When there are still people out there who use "password" as their password, it's fairly easy to hack someone's email. Also, a trick one could try is to go to gmail and select "create new account" and type in random email addresses. When there is one that says "that address already exists, please try something else" then you take the one that exists and start doing a brute force password entering session on it. If you get in, there may be something useful there, maybe just spam, but this could be an option. I haven't actually tried this... It may work and it may not!
What is your favourite game for the Game Boy Advance console?
For me, it was a pair of games. Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons and Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Ages. Technically for GB Color but it was released during the Advance's reign and featured Advance specific features.I couldn't afford both of them back then, so a friend and I agreed to get one each then swap after completing. It worked out well, as both games were kind of part of the same thing and save files carried over but it didn't matter which one you played first. The stories were independent... but tied together, you couldn't get the whole story without playing both.What I really liked though, was when discussing the games later with my friend, we found there were extras that were only made available if it was a carried over save file. I started with Seasons and was watching him play a section, there were things there that I hadn't seen and I thought I'd scoured the game world, and we found the same vice versa, so we ended up swapping back to try and see all the stuff we missed out on. So, the best game on the GB Advance was actually a pair of GB Color games. But a really, really close second, was the original Golden Sun. It had a lot of text and a few annoying sections but otherwise was a pretty solid RPG.
How do I fix my micro SD card that became a read-only memory card?
Step 1. Run CMD to remove 'Read Only' from hard disk/USB/SD card/external hard driveIt’s quite simple to remove and fix storage device 'Read Only' error by applying CMD command. The only thing that you shall keep in mind is to be very careful while following below CMD guide steps to remove 'Read Only' error from SD card, USB drive, hard disk or external hard drive.Connect 'Read Only' storage device such as SD card, USB, external hard drive etc with PC;Open Command Prompt by typing: command in Search tab, right-click Command Prompt run as administrator.Type: diskpart and hit Enter;Type: list disk and hit Enter;Type: select disk 0 and hit Enter; (0 shall be the drive letter of your read-only hard drive/USB/SD card etc.)Type: attributes disk clear readonly and hit Enter;Type: exit and hit Enter to finish the process.After this, your storage device shall be accessible again and you can be able to read and use the saved data on your SD card, USB or external hard drive then. If you still cannot access saved data on your storage devices or lost some saved files/documents, don’t worry. Here below in Step 2, you’ll know how to access to your saved data.Step 2. Restore saved data from HDD/USB or external HDD after removing 'read-only'/write-protection errorIf you cannot access the saved data on your storage devices such as SD card, USB drive or external hard drive after removing the 'Read Only' error, don’t worry. Right here we’ll show you how to simply access and restore all saved data from your device with powerful data recovery tool from EaseUS.EaseUS data recovery tool supports you to get data out of inaccessible storage devices, RAW disk and even find hidden files for you with simple clicks. Just free download and install it on your PC and follow below 3 steps to get data back now:1. Connect storage devices such as USB/SD card or external hard drive with Windows PC;Run EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard and select location of your 'Read Only', encrypted or inaccessible storage device