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User: ronys

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Comments · 71

  1. Kermit on Ask Slashdot: What Are Some Things That Every Hacker Once Knew? (ibiblio.org) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The protocol, not the frog (which it was named after).

  2. Questionable Assumption on Majority of Young American Adults Think Astrology Is a Science · · Score: 1

    Since when do young Americans think?

  3. so on NASA's 'Inspirational' Mars Flyby · · Score: 1

    Venus and Mars are alright tonight?

  4. Implementation, not algorithm! on Researchers Find Way To Zap RSA Algorithm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's an implementation on specific hardware that was broken. Not the first time, nor the last. If the *algorithm* would have been broken, now *that* would have been news!

  5. Re:Teamviewer on Simple, Free Web Remote PC Control? · · Score: 1

    Chalk up another vote for teamviewer. Latest version doesn't even require an installation. Recommended.

  6. Why Science Lost on Mixed Outcome of Texas Textbook Vote · · Score: 3, Informative

    Superficially, the decision sounds fine - of course we want students to analyze the scientific evidence! The problem is that the creationists are going to come back with a novel definition of 'scientific' evidence that treats Intelligent Design as a scientific hypothesis, and they're going to demand textbooks that include a treatment of all kinds of nonsensical 'theories'. ID is not scientific. It has no evidence in its favor (pointing out that we lack intermediate fossils showing the evolution of the lesser red-necked Argentinian swamp leech is not evidence that it was designed). But the Discovery Institute does have another bad textbook waiting in the wings for the next round of textbook-buying decisions in Texas.

    For more details, see here.

  7. Pat Condell said it best on UN Attacks Free Speech · · Score: 1

    "It's at times like this, isn't it, that you realise just how much we need the United Nations -
    about as much as we need an ear infection."
    Priceless.
    Here
    (Or here, with subtitles in several languages)

  8. What mistakes have you made? on Interviewing Experienced IT People? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And what have you learned from them?

  9. Re:Some are actually opposed to privacy on How to Convince Non-IT Friends that Privacy Matters? · · Score: 1

    I like to respond by asking how much money the person earns.

  10. Check out FreeNAS on Netgear Introduces Linux-Based NAS Devices · · Score: 1

    http://www.freenas.org/ - FreeBSD based, a pleasure to install, configure and use.

  11. Depends on your lattitude on Is Daylight Saving Shift Really Worth It? · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Obviously, the closer you are to the equator, the smaller the difference between daylight hours in summer and winter.

    However, for those North/South of about 30 degrees, the difference is significant. Not to mention the (measured, reference unavailable) reduction in traffic accidents due to fewer people driving home from work in the dark.

  12. Encryption tools on 17 Online File Storage Services Tested · · Score: 3, Informative

    For encrypting single files, gpg is probably the simplest solution. Note that you don't have to bother with key-rings, digital signatures, etc. Just use conventional encryption and a GOOD (can't emphasize this enough) password.

    A more user-friendly approach would be to use an encrypting file system, such as TrueCrypt, which presents a single file as a drive on your machine, and backup the encrypted file regularly.

  13. Re:There goes interstellar travel on NASA Overjoyed at Catch From Stardust · · Score: 1

    Actually, the collector was only exposed part of the time - one side was exposed to stellar wind, the other side was exposed in the vicinity of the comet. I assume the visible samples are from the latter.

    This doesn't invalidate your conclusion, though - collision with dust needs to be taken into account at high speeds.

  14. Re:And it's evolution that's hard to swallow? on Quantum Trickery - Einstein's Strangest Theory · · Score: 1

    Kudos for a well-written and intellectually honest reply.

    You might wish to browse through http://talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/ for direct non-circular evidence of speciation from less to more complex forms.

    To state that there is no "minimal or no willingness to offer convincing evidence" is just plain wrong.

    Evolution is considered to be both s theory and a fact (see http://talkorigins.org/faqs/evolution-fact.html). It is also science in the strict sense of being able to generate hypothesis which are falsifiable by observation. It is as much a science as astronomy and archaeology are. Creationalism (and it's modern version, intelligent design) is not.

    I agree with you that in principle, evolution does not contradict the existence of a diety. Particularly so since evolution does not claim to deal with the question of the origin of life. This distinction, however,is lost on many beleivers, Christian and otherwise, particularly in the USA. Perhaps they feel that the removal of the need of a god as a creator of species (and man in particular) leaves the diety as nothing more than a master of ceremony, as Daniel Dennett recently put it.

    Corresponding disclaimer: I'm an atheist - a member of the only minority against which discrimination is both politically correct and actively encouraged.

  15. Re:And it's evolution that's hard to swallow? on Quantum Trickery - Einstein's Strangest Theory · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Simple, really:

    1. Evolution theory is, in essence, simple. You've described it pretty accurately in a couple of sentences. It's also very simple to misunderstand, e.g., get only the "random variation part". Quantum mechanics is so counter-intuitive as to be considered incomprehensible.

    2. Evolution theory poses a clear and present danger to the religious worldview, insofar as one of the strongest (perhap the strongest) cases for belief in a diety is the argument from design ("can you imagine a building without a builder?" etc.). The whole point of evolution undermines this argument: Yes, it is possible to get from something simple to something complex without a "designer". Quantum mechanics, OTOH, falls under "god works in mysterious ways" to most folks.

  16. Meshes nicely with the U3 initiative on USB FlashDrives The New PC? · · Score: 1

    U3 is an initiative of flash card vendors to make applications available on any (windows) computer with a USB socket, without installing, changing the registry or leaving data behind on the host's harddrive.

    Of course, security is always an issue - not everyone would (or should) trust a random PC not to sniff all the data on the inserted disk-on-key.

  17. Re:Password Safe is the answer on Write Down Your Passwords · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Actually, PasswordSafe is actively maintained on SourceForge: http://passwordsafe.sourceforge.net/

    You don't need to trust Schneier's rep, as the sources are available...

    As to the Crypto, AES is currently much less reviewed than Blowfish, as it'smuch newer and 3DES, while reliable, is relatively SLOW...

    Note: I'm the current project admin.

  18. PasswordSafe on Write Down Your Passwords · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, Bruce Schneier wrote exactly such an application, and put in on SourceForge a while ago, where it is now currently maintained:
    PasswordSafe

    Note: I'm the project's current admin.

  19. PasswordSafe on Enforcing Crytographically Strong Passwords · · Score: 1
    Since passwords are not going to dissapear tomorrow, applications such as PasswordSafe allow users to keep separate and random passwords for each account, while the user need only remember a single (hopefully strong) password.

    Note: I'm the project's admin on SourceForge.

  20. Combining SHA-1 and MD-5 as a workaround on More on Newly Broken SHA-1 · · Score: 1

    While both of the above algorithms are "broken" in the sense that a collision may be found relatively easily, if a signature is done on both hashes, the attacker has to find a message that provides the same MD5 hash and the same SHA-1 hash, which I strongly doubt is possible theoretically.
    In other words, if I provide text T and a signature derived from both MD5(T) and SHA1(T), an attacker wil have to find T' such that MD5(T) == MD5(T') AND SHA1(T) == SHA1(T').
    Note also that using SHA-1 (or MD5 for that matter) with HMAC is still secure, which means that many protocols using HMAC are OK.

  21. PasswordSafe on Passwords - 64 Characters, Changed Daily? · · Score: 1

    The dilemma is between passwords that are easy to remember, and hence crack, or too hard to remember, resulting in them being written down.

    An alternative solution is Password Safe, a well-regarded application that "allows you to have a different password for all the different programs and websites that you deal with, without actually having to remember all those usernames and passwords". The main version is for Windows, but Linux variants (as well as an older PocketPC version) are also available.
    Full disclosure - I'm the project administrator.

  22. Re:makemeapassword.com on Passwords - 64 Characters, Changed Daily? · · Score: 1

    The site may have good intentions, but the end result is that the passwrds it generates are passed in the clear to the user's machine. Not such a good idea (at least if they'd have used SSL...).
    Also, the generated passwords are quite structured, making them much less entropic then they seem - if an attacker knows that a user has used this site (e.g., by looking at the victim's browser history), she can mount an attack considerably stronger than brute-force.

  23. Er, how is this inherited? on Macaque Monkey Goes Totally Bipedal · · Score: 1

    For this to have anything to do with evolution, the new trait (bipedalism, in this case), has to be passable to the descendants of the animal with the trait.

    If this trait is a result of illness, it's hard to see how this can change the animal's genome, making it passable to future genrations.

    Nice story, though...

  24. Re:Feasibility of the Space Elevator on Notes From 3rd Annual Space Elevator Conference · · Score: 3, Informative

    While Arthur C. Clarke certainly popularized the idea of a space elevator in his science fiction novel "The Fountains of Paradise", the original concept is credited to the Russian engineer Yuri Artsutanov, who published it in 1960. See, for example, here

  25. Underlying assumption still wrong on The March Towards Micropayments · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Clay Shirky makes a strong case why micropayments haven't taken off, and probably won't in the forseeable future. In short, the difference between "free" and "only $0.005" is much larger than only half a cent - it's a change in the mindset of the reader. The article also references more academic papers describing the weaknesses of micropayments.