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Spike (a.k.a. Hit): When an offensive player attacks the ball with a one-arm motion done over the head, attempting to get a kill Spatch : When a player contacts the ball incorrectly during a hit causing the ball to propel unlike how the hitter intended
A "do not duplicate" key (or DND key, for short) is one that has been stamped "do not duplicate", "duplication prohibited" or similar by a locksmith or manufacturer as a passive deterrent to discourage a retail key cutting service from duplicating a key without authorization or without contacting the locksmith or manufacturer who originally cut ...
Locks are usually re keyed to build master-key systems, make a set of locks share a common key, or to eliminate compromised keys. [2] [3] [4] Sometimes worn pins are replaced with new pins if the old pins become too short to reach the shear-line. [5] The shear-line is the thin line shared by the lock plug and its cylindrical housing. If a pin ...
Mortgage and refinance rates for Dec. 27, 2024: Average rates for 30-year benchmark hover at 7.00% after post–Fed cut spike Kelly Suzan Waggoner Updated December 27, 2024 at 6:44 AM
Key stretching algorithms depend on an algorithm which receives an input key and then expends considerable effort to generate a stretched cipher (called an enhanced key [citation needed]) mimicking randomness and longer key length. The algorithm must have no known shortcut, so the most efficient way to relate the input and cipher is to repeat ...
Without tariffs getting in the way, Ford, General Motors and Chrysler were able to “rationalize” their production in North America, including their Canadian facilities, to streamline and focus ...
A skeleton key is a key that has been filed or cut to create one that can be used to unlock a variety of warded locks each with a different configuration of wards. This can usually be done by removing most of the center of the key, allowing it to pass by the wards without interference, operating the lock.
In his review of the Spike & Mike documentary “Animation Outlaws,” Variety‘s Peter Debruge described Spike & Mike as the “razor blades” to Disney’s “candied apples” at the time.