foot per ns in free space.  60-80% of that in a transmission line, depending on 
sqrt(LC)  (mostly depends on dielectric.. solid vs foam vs air), except for 
some exotic delay line coax which has a center conductor wound as a spiral, so 
the L/unit length is really big.

so more like 20-25 cm/nanosecond.  10cm/ns would be a very slow line
________________________________________
From: [email protected] [[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Hearns, John [[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, February 28, 2011 02:27
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Beowulf] /dev/random entropy on stateless/headless nodes

So (from the wiki) piping dumb data into /dev/random is harmless since the 
entropy measure wouldn't be fooled, so then yes, just anyone can pipe some 
bytes in anytime. So yeah, the rtdsc, I just meant my 9 digits of nanoseconds 
as something easy to try at boot time, and shuffling that with the MAC is a 
good idea. (Since a light-nanosecond is about what 10 cm? the lengths of cables 
in the server room would be enough to give every node different boot times, in 
nanoseconds, right? or no, because your cables are all standard lengths, but 
coiled as needed?).

Me Sir! Please! Me Sir!

As a cub high energy physicist, in the ‘counting room’ for an experiment one 
day, my supervisor was discussing coaxial delay lines with me.
Light travels at a foot per nanosecond, so that enables you to choose 
appropriate lengths of coax delay lines for coincidence counting experiments.


Sigh – I guess we have gone all metric since then with 10cm per nanosecond!


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