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Anion exchange protein 2 (AE2) is a membrane transport protein that in humans is encoded by the SLC4A2 gene. [5] [6] AE2 is functionally similar to the Band 3 Cl − /HCO3 − exchange protein. Mice have been used to explore the function of AE2. AE2 contributes to basolateral membrane HCO 3 − transport in the gastrointestinal tract. [7]
Software crack illustration. Software cracking (known as "breaking" mostly in the 1980s [1]) is an act of removing copy protection from a software. [2] Copy protection can be removed by applying a specific crack. A crack can mean any tool that enables breaking software protection, a stolen product key, or guessed password. Cracking software ...
AE2 may refer to: HMAS AE2, E-class submarine of the Royal Australian Navy; Aero Ae 02, a design of Czechoslovakian plane; Anion Exchanger 2, transport protein; Ape Escape 2; A size designation for Constantinian bronze coins; Applied Energistics 2, a popular mod for the video game Minecraft; Aminoestradiol, a synthetic estrogen
Cyberlink, the company which sells the PowerDVD player, stated that their software could not have been used as part of these exploits. [19]On April 16, 2007, the AACS consortium announced that it had revoked the Device Keys used by both Cyberlink PowerDVD and InterVideo WinDVD, and patches were made available for users which provided uncompromised encryption keys and better security for the keys.
Advanced Installer Caphyon Active Trialware: Yes Yes Yes NSIS: Nullsoft: Active zlib License: No No Orca (Part of Windows SDK) Microsoft: Active Freeware (proprietary) Yes; exclusively Wise: Wise Solutions, Inc. Discontinued Non-free No WiX: Outercurve Foundation: Active Ms-RL (previously CPL) Yes; exclusively Yes No
AACS uses cryptography to control and restrict the use of digital media. It encrypts content under one or more title keys using the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). Title keys are decrypted using a media key (encoded in a Media Key Block) and the Volume ID of the media (e.g., a physical serial number embedded on a pre-recorded disc).
IBM 3895 was a document reader/inscriber announced by IBM on April 5, 1977. [ 75 ] [ 12 ] It was developed by IBM Charlotte and manufactured by IBM Endicott. [ 75 ] It could optically read the handwritten dollar and cent amounts written on documents, print that value onto the document (inscribe) and then sort that document.
It works on the 8-round version of AES-128, with a time complexity of 2 48, and a memory complexity of 2 32. 128-bit AES uses 10 rounds, so this attack is not effective against full AES-128. The first key-recovery attacks on full AES were by Andrey Bogdanov, Dmitry Khovratovich, and Christian Rechberger, and were published in 2011. [26]