pegasus

2003-07-09 Thread netkita
How do i use my privite and public keyrings to encrypt email. I think that I have the file part and then use as an attatchment ok Thanks

Re: Idea: The ultimate CD/DVD auditing tool (meow)

2003-07-09 Thread Mike Rosing
On Wed, 9 Jul 2003, Major Variola (ret) wrote: > Yes this is for localization ---clicks are broadband, you need to > identify which freq components are used. I still think > humans can't discriminate the phase of a tone. In fact, MP3s > use this to cut bits. They can tell relative phase, but it

Re: Idea: The ultimate CD/DVD auditing tool (meow)

2003-07-09 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 11:45 AM 7/9/03 -0700, Mike Rosing wrote: >On Wed, 9 Jul 2003, Major Variola (ret) wrote: >> Actually I thought humans are insensitive to phase relations, modulo >> inter-aural timing at low frequencies for spatial location. Perhaps >> that >> is what you meant? But spatial location isn't the

Re: Idea: The ultimate CD/DVD auditing tool

2003-07-09 Thread Mike Rosing
On Wed, 9 Jul 2003, Major Variola (ret) wrote: > Do cats buy a lot of audiophile equiptment :8=|| Nope. That's why I have a job (for another couple of months anyway, till the grant runs out.) > Actually I thought humans are insensitive to phase relations, modulo > inter-aural timing at low freq

Re: Idea: The ultimate CD/DVD auditing tool

2003-07-09 Thread Sampo Syreeni
On 2003-07-08, Major Variola (ret) uttered to [EMAIL PROTECTED]: >I haven't, but it does ring true. You'd get 2 Khz as well as other >intermodulation products. Provided there's a nonlinearity, effective in the ultrasonic range, somewhere. Mere interference (which is what we usually refer to as "b

Re: [CI] Re: Finding collision resistant hash functions

2003-07-09 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 02:59 AM 7/9/03 -0700, Sarad AV wrote: >hi, >> MV: >>There's nothing gained by >> increasing >> the input entropy (compressing > >I was looking for such a compression function such >that the chances of collision in the message digest >obtained by hashing these 2^80 messages is collision >free or

MRAM, persistance of memory

2003-07-09 Thread Major Variola (ret.)
The persistance of memory could be a problem if your melting clocks are swarmed by spooky ants. Wired has an article on magetic RAM http://wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,59559,00.html that fails to mention security implications. Obviously nonvolitile RAM presents a different security risk than

Re: MRAM, persistance of memory

2003-07-09 Thread Eric Murray
On Wed, Jul 09, 2003 at 10:23:55AM -0700, Major Variola (ret.) wrote: > Wired has an article on magetic RAM > http://wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,59559,00.html > that fails to mention security implications. Obviously > nonvolitile RAM presents a different security risk than > RAM that forget

Grey-World

2003-07-09 Thread Steve Schear
An excellent site for those interested in tunneling, covert channels, network related steganographic methods developments. http://gray-world.net/ "There is no protection or safety in anticipatory servility." Craig Spencer

Re: Idea: The ultimate CD/DVD auditing tool

2003-07-09 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 07:15 PM 7/8/03 -0700, Mike Rosing wrote: >To produce 65kHz (for cats) my present boss prefers a 1 MHz sample rate. Do cats buy a lot of audiophile equiptment :8=|| >The human hearing system is capable of noticing phase relations at 100kHz >rates. Actually I thought humans are insensitive to

Re: Genetic engineering [was: RE: DNA of relative indicts man, cuckol ding ignored]

2003-07-09 Thread John Kozubik
On Mon, 7 Jul 2003, Trei, Peter wrote: > Its when we get to 'fixes' to behaviour and personality > that things start to get very hairy. I fear that those in > power will use genetic engineering as they have used > every other tool at their disposal - weapons, states, > laws, and governments - to m

Re: Idea: The ultimate CD/DVD auditing tool

2003-07-09 Thread Mike Rosing
On Wed, 9 Jul 2003, Peter Fairbrother wrote: > the nyquist/lindquist/someone-else-who-was-pissed sampling theorems are > based on the possibility of mathematically extracting frequencies from > digital information in a STEADY_STATE situation. > > That doesn't mean that a speaker will properly repr

Re: Idea: The ultimate CD/DVD auditing tool

2003-07-09 Thread Peter Fairbrother
I wrote: the nyquist/lindquist/someone-else-who-was-pissed sampling theorems are based on the possibility of mathematically extracting frequencies from digital information in a STEADY_STATE situation. That doesn't mean that a speaker will properly reproduce those frequencies. Consider the dynami