Dear Dmitry,

You asked:
> May be some sort of vitamin may help to improve 
> memory capabilities for average users?
> Any ideas or opinions?

*Memory Drinks & Pills*
There are several chemicals with proven effectiveness
as memory enhancers.  Caffeine is the most popular.
Caffeine is thoroughly proven as an aid to memory in
rigorous studies.  It is often the case that a 
caffeine user gets best results by remembering 
something he learned while having had caffeine.  So,
if you drink two cups of coffee every day, and you
have an item to remember, drink the coffee, then
come up with the item.  Then, when you want to 
remember it, be sure to have your two cups of coffee.
Caffeine may be taken in coffee, tea, bufferred
aspirin, and directly as no-doze or similar pill.

Ginseng and gingko biloba are also useful in enhancing
mental alertness, a factor which is often tested with
memory trials.  Ginseng has similar effects to caffeine
in helping wakefulness, and is found in some teas and
in various dietary supplements.  There are a few
different types of ginseng, including one from Siberia.
Some are harsher than others, and as with all chemicals,
allergic reactions can be prompted by exposure.  Your
individual mileage will vary.

Gingko biloba is an herb, generally found in supplements.
I don't know of any foods that have it commonly.  It 
has been shown to aid in the mental alertness of the
elderly, including some sufferers of the preliminary
stages of Alzheimer's and related disorders.

*Health & Memory*
In addition to these overt aids to memory, which are cheap
and plentiful, other vitamin supplements may be helpful
in the general promotion of health.  People who are 
sick, under great stress, or otherwise feeling poorly
don't have as much success with any mental function.
So, B vitamins for stress, vitamin C for immune function,
ginseng for immune function, and vitamin E for plenty
of sex should all be considered helpful.  Good brain
function is assisted by protein, so eat your meat or if
you have a vegan attitude, get your rice and beans.  Fish
and walnuts have omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids, so 
called essential fatty acids; fish has long been called
"brain food" on account of the importance of these fatty
acids to brain function.  

In addition to oily fish, such as kippers and sardines,
and nuts such as the walnut, these essential fatty acids
are found in purslane and a number of other vegetables.

Don't forget trace minerals with some sort of generic 
multi-vitamin and multi-mineral supplement, excluding 
iron unless you are a woman who is presently menstruating 
as iron is readily available in foods and quite toxic taken 
excessively.  Your body won't function well without the
trace minerals you find in generic multi-mineral supplements.

Your multi-vitamin and multi-mineral supplement that gives
you "100%" of the US Department of Agriculture 
"recommended daily allowance" or RDA is not enough if
you have any significant stress in your life.  These
"daily allowances" are bare minimal values needed to
avoid scurvy, beri-beri, and other nutritional deficiency
diseases, if, and only if, you have no stress factors.
If you get upset every few minutes, try increasing your
B vitamins, because these are consumed by stress very
rapidly, and aren't stored in your body.

*See it, Think it*
Beta carotene, carrots, and carotenoid complex vitamins,
including our friend alpha-tocopherol (vitamin E) are
useful for eyesight.   Eyesight is a tremendous aid to
memory, as we are a visually oriented species.  So, eat
your veggies.  Vitamin A, on the other hand, can be
poisonous at fairly low doses, is fat soluble and often
stored by the body, and can be generated by your body
from certain items, such as beta carotene rich foods.

*Parlor Tricks*
There are a great many books and ideas about memory
tricks.  These can be found at many public and college
and in some private libraries.  I'm sure an Amazon.com
search and a Bananagold.com purchase is a workable way
of finding such books, or a trip to the local bookstore
would be good, anyway.

People who know more words and more jargon may have an
advantage in coming up with good passwords.  There are
a huge number of ways of relating numbers to words so
that the passphrase is composed of both (and thus has
more randomness or entropy) without making it harder
to memorize.  

For example, we all know individuals whose phone numbers 
we've memorized; a combination of their name and phone 
number, with the elements interspersed such as 
  joe713bob990briggs9536 
would be easy to remember if you know Joe Bob Briggs 
has that number; there are an effectively infinite 
number of names and phone numbers to choose, and any 
variation on the distribution of the parts could make
for an effective pass phrase.

*More Examples*
Other name and number combinations which have easy
mnemonic cues (mnemonic comes from the Greek muse 
for memory, Mnemone, and refers to how a thing is
memorized) include historical dates and names such 
as william1066conqueror, highways and cities such 
as houstonus59texas, and chemical elements such
gold79silver47copper29 (which elements appear all in
the same column of the periodic table of elements, a
fascinating aspect of the chemistry of these items).
It isn't difficult to come up with plenty of ways to
vary these password generating ideas, with capitals
and lowercase letters, with the odd punctuation mark,
and so forth.  The trick is to find ways of relating
the letters and numbers so that they mean something
to you, and are not totally random.

*More Tricks*
Most memory books use a related technique which teaches
you to think of something for every item you want to
memorize.  For example, if you are trying to relate
names to people you've just met, think of something
each person is wearing as you get their name, and
then use that name and visualize the item of clothing.
I find this works for me very well with women I meet,
much less well with men.  Your mileage may vary.  With
a set of letters and numbers that appear random, each
can be assigned to some popular name.  For example,
the main sequence of stars can be remembered by the
words sequence associated with their color designators:
 Oh be a fine girl, kiss me
 O B A F G K M
and many other mnemonic nonsense phrases are used.
Acronyms are often intended to be mnemonic, although
this technique is made difficult by the frequent use
of the same acronyms in different industries.

*Opinions are like sphincters*
As for opinions, I have a simple opinion to share on
this subject: a fool and his money are soon parted.
Those who can invent and remember unique passphrases
are at an advantage.

A further thought on the cybot that seems to be hacking
at the e-gold system: it may be trying all character
combos of a finite length.  So, if you have a password
of less than ten characters length, you may wish to 
consider an upgrade.

*Make it better*
Nothing prevents you from getting better results with a
new password, as long as you take adequate precautions
in formulating it, memorizing it, and input/output. So,
if you think a password is compromised, or may be
readily compromised, you should seriously consider
changing it to something better.

I hope these comments have been of some help.  For my
own part, I have a photogenic memory that allows me to
recall esoterica as remote as my junior high school
locker combination, phone numbers of girls I dated
decades ago, the birthdates of an array of European
rulers in a variety of calendar systems, and many
useful physical, chemical, and mathematical formulae.
I call it a "photogenic" memory because it is not
photographic, but close enough to make me look good.

Chances are that most people know enough about something
to be able to come up with a few dozen passwords that
they can easily recall, and which would be hard for
anyone else to generate.  If not, well, those are the
breaks.  As has recently been pointed out in someone's
.sig file quote, individual variation is part of the
beauty of free humans.

Regards,

Jim
 http://www.GoldBarterHoldings.com/
 http://www.ezez.com/free/freejim.html/
 http://www.two-cents-worth.com/?101468&EG


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