Why the hell is it written as "Okami" everywhere, when the first letter is clearly written with a macron...? I could understand "Ookami" if you can't produce U+014C on your keyboard, but why the shortening of the first vowel?
Well, at least the Wikipedia gets it right.
You can transmit such a purely random cipher - that's what quantum cryptography is all about (well, almost). Basicly, everyone and everything who could potentially intercept/read/change such a secured channel, alters it. There's - physically - no way you can do anything about it.
There are some articles on this subject in Scientific American, but I don't have the time to find them right now.:)
The same sentace whould be "ja(I) ide(am going) do parku(to the park)" - you can leave "ja" ("I") out, and rearrange it any way you want ("do parku ide", "ide do parku ja"). The forms where "I" stands after the "am going" sound unusual, though.
"The technology industry is perhaps the most guilty of all industries when it comes to love of acronyms"
This guy certainly never had to deal with the military.
Why the hell is it written as "Okami" everywhere, when the first letter is clearly written with a macron ...? I could understand "Ookami" if you can't produce U+014C on your keyboard, but why the shortening of the first vowel?
Well, at least the Wikipedia gets it right.
Translation: Somebody found out exactly how the universe works - again - and we all know what happens then, don't we?
Damn scientists.
You can transmit such a purely random cipher - that's what quantum cryptography is all about (well, almost). Basicly, everyone and everything who could potentially intercept/read/change such a secured channel, alters it. There's - physically - no way you can do anything about it.
There are some articles on this subject in Scientific American, but I don't have the time to find them right now. :)
Read you,
Martin Sojka.
The same sentace whould be "ja(I) ide(am going) do parku(to the park)" - you can leave "ja" ("I") out, and rearrange it any way you want ("do parku ide", "ide do parku ja"). The forms where "I" stands after the "am going" sound unusual, though.
Read you...
Martin Sojka.