- signing up to a service means to give them your public key.
- singing in to a service means to get a challenge, sign it with your private key and send it encryped back.
OSS browser could be implemented to do the challenge/response for you.
I did not think much about it (I just had the idea), but I think that there wouldn't be any privacy problem. only the private key is *really* important...
As everyone knows there are no drivers for Airport Extreme for Linux. Why can't OSX inside Mac-on-Linux access the Airport hardware? Then it would be possible to configure OSX to NAT and Linux would be online via Mac-on-Linux via WLAN.
- signing up to a service means to give them your public key.
- singing in to a service means to get a challenge, sign it with your private key and send it encryped back. OSS browser could be implemented to do the challenge/response for you.
I did not think much about it (I just had the idea), but I think that there wouldn't be any privacy problem. only the private key is *really* important...
OK, you correct.
As everyone knows there are no drivers for Airport Extreme for Linux. Why can't OSX inside Mac-on-Linux access the Airport hardware? Then it would be possible to configure OSX to NAT and Linux would be online via Mac-on-Linux via WLAN.
Mac-on-Linux on PPC is like VMWare von x86. As far as I know there's no goal to run on x86.
no. it's called drag & drop!