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:: Joining a website community is one way to access the various features being offered by the site. In such a case, one is required to share some personal information to these sites to qualify. However, you should not be worried if you have verified the legitimacy of these sites. Popular online website communities that are constantly growing are Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, Yahoo! Mail, and Gmail. For example, in order for you to send and receive email messages, you should sign up for a Yahoo! Mail or Gmail account.
Signing up in these websites is very easy and your account can already be registered in less than a minute or two. Basically, a website community makes it easier and faster for new members to get to join up quickly and use their account right away. Usually, websites that are open to all offer free sign up. There are some websites however that require you to pay for a membership fee to avail of their special services.
The usual information that websites need for your account includes your name, contact information (landline, cell number, and backup email address), address, and birthday. Also, they make it a point to ask you for some other details (that includes your birthday, your mother’s maiden name, etc) to authenticate your account. Some would let you type in a question that only you would know the answer. In such case you also provide the answer during sign up. This is very important when you would have forgotten your password and the site has a system that will provide a clue on what your password is.
This brings us to the most important aspect of signing up – your username and password. For network communities like Facebook, the email address that you provide already serves as your username when you login to their pages. However, in some sites like email providers, require you to create a username for your account. Commonly, people use their full names (e.g. Johnny.Doe or Joe_Doe) or nicknames. It is important though that your username is unique (for example there is no other Joe_Doe already existing in Yahoo! Mail) and one that you could remember easily.

For your password, you should create one that is considered as ‘strong’ which means that it cannot be easily guessed and hacked by other people who would try to do some trouble on your account. Usually a ‘strong’ password is 8 or more characters length and a combination of letters and numbers. Never ever use your birthday as your password as it is the topmost guess of hackers.
In the event that you have one day failed to remember your login account username and password, do not fret since well-built sites always offer a workaround for such scenarios as they are common problems experienced by users worldwide. Such workaround takes in the form of a question (usually ‘Forgot your password?’) with a link that would send a reset password link/forgotten password details to the user’s backup email address. Definitely, signing up while providing a backup email address is very important when cases like these would occur which are common.
Source: http://www.submityourarticle.com/articles/Andrew-Scherer-8708/facebook-login-192012.php
In a pulsating qualifying, Sebastian Vettel has secured pole position for the Malaysian Grand Prix. The reigning World Champion beat Lewis Hamilton by the narrowest of margins. The McLaren man was just one-tenth slower than Vettel’s pole-setting time of 01:34.870 minutes.
Vettel’s team-mate Mark Webber had to settle for third on the grid after qualifying two-tenths behind Hamilton. The Australian is joined on row two by Jenson Button, who he only just edged into fourth. The tight battle at the top between Red Bull und McLaren relegated the rest of the field to the status of also-rans.
For example, fifth-placed Fernando Alonso was around nine-tenths slower than Vettel and still three-tenths down on Button. Starting next to the Spaniard on Sunday will be Nick Heidfeld who qualified sixth. Felipe Massa and Vitaly Petrov share the fourth row, while Nico Rosberg and Kamui Kobayashi take the last two places from Q3.

The biggest name to go out in the second session was Michael Schumacher. The Mercedes driver had to settle for eleventh, just behind Heidfeld, after losing a lot of time on the middle sector. Also failing to make the cut were Sebastien Buemi, Jaime Alguersuari, Paul di Resta, Rubens Barrichello, Sergio Perez and Adrian Sutil.
It was shaping up to be a McLaren one-two at the front, with Button setting a lap time of 01:35.569 minutes and Hamilton just three-tenths behind. It also looked at that stage as if Vettel and Webber – with a deficit of four-tenths and five-tenths respectively – would be consigned to the second starting row. Meanwhile, the rest of the Top 10 going forward from Q2 were Alonso, Rosberg, Massa, Petrov, Kobayashi and Heidfeld in that order.
Source: http://uk.autoblog.com/2011/04/09/qualifying-vettel-pips-hamilton/