Doesn't change the fact that either
a) The snooper has an open view to your room
i.e. the window is open or there are no curtains...etc so there are still other privacy issues...
or b) The equipment is in the room
If so, then why not take better advantage of the situation...
It comes as little surprise that there is negliible performance difference between ATA100 and ATA133. The nomenclature seems to imply superiority i.e. it's 33% better! but is no more credible than Intel 's advertising push of MHz as a comparator.
There is an interesting line in the conclusionn tho, which says "Keep that main idea behind ATA133 is minimise bottlenecks in the system when your running MORE than one drive, and to allow manufacturers to build drives larger than 120GB" but even this advantage isn't generally realised.
...that it's best not to keep all your eggs in one basket. Knowledge of hardware and software security as well as common sense is required for if security is paramount.
Doesn't change the fact that either a) The snooper has an open view to your room i.e. the window is open or there are no curtains...etc so there are still other privacy issues... or b) The equipment is in the room If so, then why not take better advantage of the situation...
If you're in a situation in which you can take advantage of this effect, why not just look at the monitor itself?
Some reasons why this isn't implemented is answered in the faq
...to release decent drivers. Tested and stable would be nice...
It comes as little surprise that there is negliible performance difference between ATA100 and ATA133. The nomenclature seems to imply superiority i.e. it's 33% better! but is no more credible than Intel 's advertising push of MHz as a comparator. There is an interesting line in the conclusionn tho, which says "Keep that main idea behind ATA133 is minimise bottlenecks in the system when your running MORE than one drive, and to allow manufacturers to build drives larger than 120GB" but even this advantage isn't generally realised.
...that it's best not to keep all your eggs in one basket. Knowledge of hardware and software security as well as common sense is required for if security is paramount.
Considering most pop-music is fairly generic now anyways, I guess this'll do what mp3's didn't to the music industry:)