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Chris Albertson wrote: |>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.
Was this by chance using LTSP? (www.ltsp.org)
- -- Jason A. Pattie [EMAIL PROTECTED] Xperience, Inc. (http://www.xperienceinc.com) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.3 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Debian - http://enigmail.mozdev.org
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