But I cannot see pple going to extra lengths to keep their notes crisp and clean, Imagine blowing 1000000 Lira cos you dropped it in a puddle or you fell into the sea.
I don't see why this chip would survive that long. Just putting the note in gin, on a warm stove or on an extra powerful magnet _should_ kill the chip, or even if it will be financially viable.
Once its fscked, I can't see the national bank replacing the chip. Would banks go on a war to keep these chips in notes?
Hell, Hitachi would even have to make their chips cocaine corrosion resistant, now that would not be cheap.
Either way, we will soon see spam in our mailboxes selling devices which will count, wash and "de-chip" your bank notes before use, rated 10K notes per minute!!!!!!
If you have the beginning of the movie, you can use VirtualDub which will reconstruct the index. You can then watch the part you downloaded, but seeking is *extremely* slow, i.e near impossible, so no fast forwarding to your "favourite bits".
There are many commercial news servers out there which provide all binary groups. If you do a lot of posting, you should ideally try and find one outside the US. EU is a good choice, but if you can find one outside the EU/US/Canada, you're laughing!!!
I personally use ClaraNews
http://www.claranews.com
its damn cheap at £30 Per Year, around 45USD, and retention is pretty good. But its anyones guess how long they can resist "copyright violation" notifications.
Re:DDE? That's dead for ages on win32.
on
Mozilla 0.9.1 Out
·
· Score: 1
By recording all your internet communications for 7 years. With helpful "guidance" from the US, the EU is going to propose its "cybercrime" treaty. Soon if you are in the US, you will hear the rhetoric "Well the EU is doing it, so should we".
Read the docs at cryptome.org, it makes somber reading.
http://www.ii.uib.no/~larsr/craptology/crv0n1-2. ht ml
This is by far the best study into the field, somewhat an extension to the hosepipe key recovery method:
Practical Key Recovery
David Beynon
January 20, 1999
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to propose a model for automatic key recovery based on principles of practical, rather than theoretical, cryptography. The paper then addresses some of the problems which must be faced and attempts to identify which aspects of the problem can be solved using existing or emerging technologies and which aspects still require human intervention.
Digital signatures would be useful, but not many companies use them/ they aren't as widespread as they should be.
On a different note, anyone know whether those disclaimers would stand up in court, like you can't forward it blah...blah...
Like postal mail, noone can tell me what I can or cannot do with stuff which lands in my mailbox. If its so important, then why are you stupid enough to send it to me? Anyone a lawer?
My friend, I really don't know why you have been modded up for that blatant troll.
This information already exists, but for how long? 30 days by law in EU.
So if you are so happy for international policing, why don't you place a camera into your home straight to the police so they can keep an eye on you, you never know, someone might break in and "hurt" your family.
Although not a perfect example, I cannot illustrate the uses this data retention would allow, seven years is a long time.
Can you imagine yourself running for mayor and the local news is publishing stories about you posting links to goatse.cx when you were a teenager? Or a story about you posing as a teenager in a chatroom talking dirty to some bloke in Afghanistan? You might have thought it was funny at the time, and its only a joke. Or your prospective employer asking you about your visits to a AIDS information website?
Wouldn't like it would you?
So in future before posting your inflammatory comments, think about the implications for others who might use the internet for human rights issues or those who are critical of a government regime.
Its a serious issue and one not worth the above purile comments in the hope of scoring some trivial little "karma".
1) There is a booming market on the various country specific newsgroups, In the UK there is uk.adverts.computers. There are also the various auction sites out there and all the for sale stuff on Yahoo. (As always buyer beware)
yes, they only perform better in Quake benchmarks. I am sure karmack whinged a while back that the vendors were only optimizing their drivers for Quake.
But are those "feats of engineering" worth the hefty price?
Definately NOT.
In 3 months time, NV will announce the "upcoming" GEF4, every Tom, Dick & Harry will be saying "Ahh man I gotta wait for the new NV, the GEF3 is just outdated", prices will plummet and in 12 months time you won't be able to give away your spanking new tech GEF3.
I re-iterate, NV is doing what Intel used to do when it had the market to itself in the "MMX" days.
Yeah, you just proved my point (in a sense). All this cool new stuff was just like MMX, a few years later MMX is fairly common and used now.
But all this kewl pixel shading will mean zilch until some game makes use of it and becomes popular.
yeah I will probably change my mind, but all this new hype means nothing until it is fairly widespread tech.
At the moment, its just something for those on the NG to say "Hey I got the big bad latest NV, is 3000 fps in Q3 good? " or "How do I overclock the new NV?". SO in other words, the card is useless other than for those who want the "latest" and are prepared to pay the premium.
BTW: I am sure those features have been available in high end cards for a long time.
NVidia is basically doing what Intel used to do, play with MHz figures and charge a hefty premium for their latest "new" chip.
Anyone remember the P133 vs P150, which only offered about 5% spped increase, but had a hefty price premium.
Just like AMD came along and bashed about Intel, someone needs to come along and bash about NVidia in the Video graphics arena. Good hardware, but expensive with crap drivers.
Yeah, that's micorsoft's plan allright, but it remains to be seen how well the market takes it up. I suppose the US will lead the way as fat pipes are more common there than anywhere else, but I just cannot see people relying on an internet connection to use basic stuff like a word processor, unless MS bribes competitors (cough...Corel...Cough) to produce.Net versions of their software and there really is no choice but to upgrade to.Net versions of everything.
Secondly, there is *deep* mistrust of MS, how they _ever_ gonna overcome that, I don't know.
I doubt anything like that would happen in Europe. In the UK a group of anti GM food "activists" were found not guilty of trashing a farmer's GM crop. There is such hostility to the stuff here that it is unlikely if ever, going to happen anywhere outside US/Canada.
Anyone remember that cheesy 80's film "The Stuff"?
I like it, should be much simpler. :-)
But I cannot see pple going to extra lengths to keep their notes crisp and clean, Imagine blowing 1000000 Lira cos you dropped it in a puddle or you fell into the sea.
I just cannot see this working somehow.
I don't see why this chip would survive that long. Just putting the note in gin, on a warm stove or on an extra powerful magnet _should_ kill the chip, or even if it will be financially viable.
Once its fscked, I can't see the national bank replacing the chip. Would banks go on a war to keep these chips in notes?
Hell, Hitachi would even have to make their chips cocaine corrosion resistant, now that would not be cheap.
Either way, we will soon see spam in our mailboxes selling devices which will count, wash and "de-chip" your bank notes before use, rated 10K notes per minute!!!!!!
The AMD 64 chip is backwards compatible, it depends on the level of OS support.
Well its worth it if you DL the 600M+ movies to be found on eDonkey, and you are still waiting for the last 10Meg to be "found" on the system.
Check it out:
http://www.edonkey2000.com
Lamer,
how appropriate.
If you have the beginning of the movie, you can use VirtualDub which will reconstruct the index. You can then watch the part you downloaded, but seeking is *extremely* slow, i.e near impossible, so no fast forwarding to your "favourite bits".
There are many commercial news servers out there which provide all binary groups. If you do a lot of posting, you should ideally try and find one outside the US. EU is a good choice, but if you can find one outside the EU/US/Canada, you're laughing!!!
I personally use ClaraNews
http://www.claranews.com
its damn cheap at £30 Per Year, around 45USD, and retention is pretty good. But its anyones guess how long they can resist "copyright violation" notifications.
Automation? COM? That's been dead for ages!
.Net Client? :-)
Why don't you include a native
"One problem is that, currently, PGP keys require a password in order to use them for signing or encrypting email"
Sorry, don't think so!
You only need your passphrase to sign. NOT encrypt only. Try it and see.
It's lacking in PGP 7 support because NAI has yet to release the SDK headers.
There is not much The Bat can do about this.
is it? do you have any links online which discuss this?
By recording all your internet communications for 7 years. With helpful "guidance" from the US, the EU is going to propose its "cybercrime" treaty. Soon if you are in the US, you will hear the rhetoric "Well the EU is doing it, so should we".
Read the docs at cryptome.org, it makes somber reading.
By using tried and trusted techniques:
. ht ml
:-)
http://www.ii.uib.no/~larsr/craptology/crv0n1-2
This is a good read on the subject
Here are some helpful tips, well worth a read:
http://www.ii.uib.no/~larsr/craptology/crv0n1-2
This is by far the best study into the field, somewhat an extension to the hosepipe key recovery method:
Practical Key Recovery
David Beynon
January 20, 1999
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to propose a model for automatic key recovery based on principles of practical, rather than theoretical, cryptography. The paper then addresses some of the problems which must be faced and attempts to identify which aspects of the problem can be solved using existing or emerging technologies and which aspects still require human intervention.
Keywords: recovery, practical, hosepipe.
Digital signatures would be useful, but not many companies use them/ they aren't as widespread as they should be.
On a different note, anyone know whether those disclaimers would stand up in court, like you can't forward it blah...blah...
Like postal mail, noone can tell me what I can or cannot do with stuff which lands in my mailbox. If its so important, then why are you stupid enough to send it to me? Anyone a lawer?
My friend, I really don't know why you have been modded up for that blatant troll.
This information already exists, but for how long? 30 days by law in EU.
So if you are so happy for international policing, why don't you place a camera into your home straight to the police so they can keep an eye on you, you never know, someone might break in and "hurt" your family.
Although not a perfect example, I cannot illustrate the uses this data retention would allow, seven years is a long time.
Can you imagine yourself running for mayor and the local news is publishing stories about you posting links to goatse.cx when you were a teenager? Or a story about you posing as a teenager in a chatroom talking dirty to some bloke in Afghanistan? You might have thought it was funny at the time, and its only a joke. Or your prospective employer asking you about your visits to a AIDS information website?
Wouldn't like it would you?
So in future before posting your inflammatory comments, think about the implications for others who might use the internet for human rights issues or those who are critical of a government regime.
Its a serious issue and one not worth the above purile comments in the hope of scoring some trivial little "karma".
1) There is a booming market on the various country specific newsgroups, In the UK there is uk.adverts.computers. There are also the various auction sites out there and all the for sale stuff on Yahoo. (As always buyer beware)
2) Have you seen the price of Quad Boards?
yes, they only perform better in Quake benchmarks. I am sure karmack whinged a while back that the vendors were only optimizing their drivers for Quake.
But are those "feats of engineering" worth the hefty price?
Definately NOT.
In 3 months time, NV will announce the "upcoming" GEF4, every Tom, Dick & Harry will be saying "Ahh man I gotta wait for the new NV, the GEF3 is just outdated", prices will plummet and in 12 months time you won't be able to give away your spanking new tech GEF3.
I re-iterate, NV is doing what Intel used to do when it had the market to itself in the "MMX" days.
Yeah, you just proved my point (in a sense). All this cool new stuff was just like MMX, a few years later MMX is fairly common and used now.
But all this kewl pixel shading will mean zilch until some game makes use of it and becomes popular.
yeah I will probably change my mind, but all this new hype means nothing until it is fairly widespread tech.
At the moment, its just something for those on the NG to say "Hey I got the big bad latest NV, is 3000 fps in Q3 good? " or "How do I overclock the new NV?". SO in other words, the card is useless other than for those who want the "latest" and are prepared to pay the premium.
BTW: I am sure those features have been available in high end cards for a long time.
NVidia is basically doing what Intel used to do, play with MHz figures and charge a hefty premium for their latest "new" chip.
Anyone remember the P133 vs P150, which only offered about 5% spped increase, but had a hefty price premium.
Just like AMD came along and bashed about Intel, someone needs to come along and bash about NVidia in the Video graphics arena. Good hardware, but expensive with crap drivers.
Now, that is ironic, and I like it a lot
Well what bothers me is how those assholes got let off for posting names and addresses of abortion doctors and now Jim bell is sure to get the bone.
Yeah, that's micorsoft's plan allright, but it remains to be seen how well the market takes it up. I suppose the US will lead the way as fat pipes are more common there than anywhere else, but I just cannot see people relying on an internet connection to use basic stuff like a word processor, unless MS bribes competitors (cough...Corel...Cough) to produce .Net versions of their software and there really is no choice but to upgrade to .Net versions of everything.
Secondly, there is *deep* mistrust of MS, how they _ever_ gonna overcome that, I don't know.
I doubt anything like that would happen in Europe. In the UK a group of anti GM food "activists" were found not guilty of trashing a farmer's GM crop. There is such hostility to the stuff here that it is unlikely if ever, going to happen anywhere outside US/Canada.
Anyone remember that cheesy 80's film "The Stuff"?
Had the demo shown some geek looking at PrOn whilst "hands-free", there would have been a serious business opportunity there