> > > I'd really like to see this. Maybe each user could have a little > black > plastic key they could insert and turn to go secure.
The PGP documentation suggestes that users cary their key in a floppy and never copy the key file to the hard disk. So your "little black plastic key" is a floppy with the write tab punched out. Where I work, our Air Force costomers are using a system where you need a smart card to make a PC work. All the PCs are basically "dead" unless you put your card in the slot. We have some Sun Rays in our lab with card readers. You can be editing a text file. Pull the card, the screen blanks when you come back from the restroom and find someone using "your" computer, no problem you just put the card in any random Sun Ray and the scren comes back with e editor up and the cursor where you left it. These Sun Rays sell for only about $1K each. Given time this kind of thing will be universal. It's already cheap. At Sun, at least in one office programmers are not alowed to "own" computers. Every time they come in the office, in the morning or after lunch they are asigned a random cubicle with a random workstation. Forces then to "walk the walk" and not just talk it. with respect to paperless office. Last place I worked at the desktop PCs (except for the technical staff) where all "diskless". No disk = no configuration. Nothing to mess up. They sucked up an rRAM disk image off the net at boot time. The above are example of the way things are going. Clients will need to work in this environment. > Heck, maybe > even a > 2-line LCD on the phone itself to provide feedback to the user. <G> > Honestly, this is definitely where I'd like to go. As long as you > didn't need to do any transcoding could you pass black side encrypted > voice through an Asterisk server? Not something I've tried yet. > > > THX/BDH > > > _______________________________________________ > Asterisk-Users mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users ===== Chris Albertson Home: 310-376-1029 [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cell: 310-990-7550 Office: 310-336-5189 [EMAIL PROTECTED] KG6OMK __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Protect your identity with Yahoo! Mail AddressGuard http://antispam.yahoo.com/whatsnewfree _______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
