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User: mckinleyn

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Comments · 64

  1. Re:Wikileaks link on TI vs. Calculator Hackers · · Score: 1

    Yet again (curse you, lameness filter):

    TI-89:

    prp76 factor: 2231124525637629443181963045297394875 (lameness filter remove this) 470510167130210300957267082210173784611
    prp79 factor: 32268855342401474150182483974101012 (lameness filter remove this) 86362761128614350056368675111071170873486957

    (these are factors of 719958345686847736367204386511 (lameness filter remove this) 6047229712788448020653515684 (lameness filter remove this) 330784137805088971433273011970552138 (lameness filter remove this) 960583799368215373582308591928985045059261105298431035818727)

  2. Re:Wikileaks link on TI vs. Calculator Hackers · · Score: 1

    And more: (filter hates long strings)
    TI-84 (Plus):

    prp77 factor: 67070508990537181066342707695603050521324524613874331879259881495826493920589
    prp78 factor: 186923771200711284770368041572205320486346816476524340240220962467860568859381

    n=EF5FEF0B0AB6E22731C17539658B2E91E53A59BF8E00FCC81D05758F26C1791CD35AF6101B1E35
    43AC3E78FD8BB8F37FC8FE85601C502EABC9132CEAD4711CB1
    p=94489014C63CC9E1E1ADB192DBBDD1F78F90A630DA9C86EFC4CBCA44E5B4D54D
    q=19D431AF2794229620B884E3750D622D1C74F2E4569DC15486FC8D5A3BCDFE2F5
    d=2A3E1B2010F318D9BD7C7E19300980B055A0E2A9554B77E7142E23CDF7C7CA13C233A3D462FDFC
    968B1F9CEAF2AC2CF305147992AD9E834192ACEBB517DB9941
    e=11

  3. Re:Wikileaks link on TI vs. Calculator Hackers · · Score: 1

    Here are the keys, sorry for the long post:

    TI-83 (Plus):

    n=82EF4009ED7CAC2A5EE12B5F8E8AD9A0
    AB9CC9F4F3E44B7E8BF2D57A2F2BEACE
    83424E1CFF0D2A5A7E2E53CB926D61F3
    47DFAA4B35B205B5881CEB40B328E58F
    p=B709D3A0CD2FEC08EAFCCF540D8A100BB38E5E091D646ADB7B14D021096FFCD
    q=B7207BD184E0B5A0B89832AA68849B29EDFB03FBA2E8917B176504F08A96246CB
    d=4D0534BA8BB2BFA0740BFB6562E843C7
    EC7A58AE351CE11D43438CA239DD9927
    6CD125FEBAEE5D2696579FA3A3958FF4FC54C685EAA91723BC8888F292947BA1
    e=11

  4. Re:Math on TI vs. Calculator Hackers · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Then sign up for an account, get good karma, read daily, and go on a flamebait-hunting spree. Or, sign up for an account and turn off sigs.

  5. Re:Oblig xkcd... on Mozilla Firefox Not In Violation of US Export Rules · · Score: 1

    Also, I should also mention the fact that legislation against encryption is ridiculously counter-productive; if the feds are after someone for any good reason, and that person is a criminal, they aren't going to respect such a restriction if they're already violating more serious laws. If all they succeed in doing is reducing legitimate commercial trade in such products, they're hurting themselves but at the same time improving the market tremendously for illicit dealers (note this observation applies to drugs as well, hmm).

    And guns, too, hmm?

  6. Re:WTF Summary on Google Buys reCAPTCHA For Better Book Scanning · · Score: 1

    Because it presents the same words to many, many people. Yes, 10 people can all be wrong, but how likely is it that more than half of 100 people are all wrong in exactly the same way?

  7. Re:Bah... on NASA Testing Breakthrough In Water Safety · · Score: 1

    It's both of them simultaneously.

  8. Re:Spore for education on New York's Video-Game-Based Public School · · Score: 1

    Because everyone should know that once you eat enough, the benevolent hand of God staples some legs to your mono-cellular ass and tosses you out of the pool.

  9. Re:Amp your signal on (Near) Constant Internet While RV'ing? · · Score: 1

    And here I thought you couldn't stop the signal...

  10. Re:Questionable on Happiness May Be Catching · · Score: 1

    Nice to meet you, Mr. Jobs!

  11. Re:Obligatory on After 8 Years of Work, Be-Alike Haiku Releases Official Alpha · · Score: 1

    Because there aren't a
    million options already
    distrowatch dot org

  12. Re:Obligatory BeOS quote on After 8 Years of Work, Be-Alike Haiku Releases Official Alpha · · Score: 1

    In the end (say 200 years from now), we'll all probably be using one standard OS (or at least hope to)

    We have seen the future, and it is now.

  13. Re:Not impressed on Windows 7 Upgrade Can Take Nearly a Day · · Score: 1
    Two things: Your computer is either old, or underpowered. Upgrading to 4 GB of DDR2 memory is all of $50 on newegg. Speed is likely related to that particular spec.

    Secondly, you said

    Microsoft has to do better if they expect people to pay for their software and OS.

    and I hope you were being sarcastic. Microsoft is not obligated to "do better" than taking a "couple of hours" to do an ill-advised upgrade (ALWAYS DO A FRESH INSTALL) on an old computer, and they wouldn't even be obligated to do so if they didn't own 90-plus % of the market and have people locked in to a fixed upgrade path.

  14. Re:Why does more data mean a longer install? on Windows 7 Upgrade Can Take Nearly a Day · · Score: 1

    Several people have already explained what it does. As is obvious, it is not doing that, and you should be more careful, or people might accidentally believe you.

  15. Re:Almost competing on Windows 7 Upgrade Can Take Nearly a Day · · Score: 1

    Right, because so many people have issues where Windows breaks on their hardware. So few companies publish Windows drivers for their products these days.

    I won't address your other points, because they're valid, and this is /.

  16. Re:Most of us will never travel to those stars.. on Hubble Releases First Post-Upgrade Images · · Score: 1

    Perhaps they would if they didn't know never to insult good science fiction.

  17. Re:Would like to see the improvement on Hubble Releases First Post-Upgrade Images · · Score: 1

    +1 Helpful Person On Slashdot.

  18. Re:what's the point of IOS? on Microsoft, Cisco Finally Patch TCP DoS Flaw · · Score: 1

    Lol. Because Linux hackers are (to a corporation) incomprehensible and unreliable. They have no contract that's broken if they choose NOT to help. History (linux people fix their software pretty much always) != reliability.

  19. Re:"Does Your College Or University Support Linux? on Does Your College Or University Support Linux? · · Score: 1

    Similar answer. Case Western Reserve University's software center (free downloads for everything available) offers Linux support for everything from antivirus to VPN programs.

  20. Re:So that explains on SA's Largest Telecomms Provider vs. a Pigeon · · Score: 1

    You're one of those people who can't enjoy anything unless it's technically accurate, aren't you?

  21. Re:Something needs to be done as today's system is on HR 3200 Considered As Software · · Score: 1

    Easy. If influence is unnecessary, it's because laws cannot be MORE beneficial to the corporations.

  22. Re:Books are good on New England Prep School Library Goes Entirely Digital · · Score: 1

    Do you understand DRM? With a five digit UID I would think so. Your posts are a bit muddled, though, let me see if I can clarify. Correct me where you think I'm wrong.

    DRM is the "feature" that makes it so you only have one copy of a digital file (something that would normally be trivial to copy). DRM means, in this case, that the hypothetical digital library can only check out as many copies as they've purchased, and that the users cannot copy the files and keep them.
    DRM is an attempt to make digital files media-dependent (you need the CD to play, you need the DVD to watch, etc) and is largely anachronistic, but in this case, it actually makes a reasonable amount of sense, and a DRM free digital library is simply implausible.

  23. Re:Interesting and a qustion on Code-Breaking Quantum Algorithm On a Silicon Chip · · Score: 2, Interesting

    With a 6-digit UID, I'm sure you know this, but for those who might not have taken a university level computing class (or who took one a long time ago), I'm going to elaborate briefly on your post.

    Problems like factoring products of primes (This is a big deal in crypto, but the explanation of why is hard if you haven't taken a university number theory course) and the above-mentioned Traveling Salesman Problem (The question of how I can most efficiently reach each of a given set of points, after given fixed distances between said points) are what we call np-complete. This means, in short, that the amount of time it takes to solve them goes up more and more for each item (point in TS, making the prime gigantic in crypto) you add. It's trivial to factor 15, as shown here, but non-trivial to factor (2 ^ 43112609 -1) * (2 ^ 42643801 -1).

    So, yes, if it can solve the traveling salesman problem (in polynomial time. Solving it is easy, unless you consider that with enough nodes, it'll take until the heat death of the universe), it IS a big deal for modern crypto because it shows that np-complete problems (whose only REAL issue is that they are computationally difficult) can be solved in a realistic amount of time, and most modern crypto counts on the fact that it cannot.

  24. Re:Reference to LotR on How a Team of Geeks Cracked the Spy Trade · · Score: 1

    *whoosh*

  25. Re:A joke my Dad told... on UK's Oldest Computer To Be "Rebooted" · · Score: 1

    Joke, n.
    1. Something said or done to evoke laughter or amusement, especially an amusing story with a punch line.