RE: Revenge of the WAVEoids: Palladium Clues May Lie In AMD Motherboard Design

2002-07-06 Thread Bill Stewart
At 10:07 PM 06/26/2002 -0700, Lucky Green wrote: An EMBASSY-like CPU security co-processor would have seriously blown the part cost design constraint on the TPM by an order of magnitude or two. Compared to the cost of rewriting Windows to have a infrastructure that can support real security?

Revenge of the WAVEoids: Palladium Clues May Lie In AMD Motherboard Design

2002-06-27 Thread R. A. Hettinga
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 I figured this was probably going on, but the following article is my first confirmation. WAVE, some of you might remember, was started by a former NatSemi Chairman back before the internet got popular. It was going to be a dial-up

RE: Revenge of the WAVEoids: Palladium Clues May Lie In AMD Motherboard Design

2002-06-27 Thread Lucky Green
Bob wrote quoting Mark Hachman: The whitepaper can not be considered a roadmap to the design of a Palladium-enabled PC, although it is one practical solution. The whitepaper was written at around the time the Trusted Computing Platform Association (TCPA) was formed in the fall of 2000;

Re: Revenge of the WAVEoids: Palladium Clues May Lie In AMD Motherboard Design

2002-06-27 Thread Peter Gutmann
R. A. Hettinga [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: WAVE, some of you might remember, was started by a former NatSemi Chairman back before the internet got popular. It was going to be a dial-up book-entry- to-the-screen content control system with special boards and chips patented to down to it's socks.