On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 1:16 PM, Travis
travis+ml-cryptogra...@subspacefield.org wrote:
I have never seen a good catalog of computationally-strong
pseudo-random number generators.
Here is a list of the FIPS-approved random number generators:
Travis travis+ml-cryptogra...@subspacefield.org writes:
I have never seen a good catalog of computationally-strong pseudo-random
number generators. It seems that everyone tries to roll their own in
whatever application they are using, and I bet there's a lot of waste and
inefficiency and
On Mar 13, 2009, at 12:16 PM, Travis wrote:
[...] would people like to help me create one by
emailing me references to extant PRNG definitions?
This paper describes the architecture of a prototype I built at Sun
back in 1995 for a random number generating service that ran in user
land. It
I have never seen a good catalog of computationally-strong
pseudo-random number generators.
Chapter 3 of Knuth's TAOCP is all about pseudo-random number
generators, starting with a fine example of the wrong way to do it.
My copy is several thousand miles away but my recollection is that his
main
On Sat, Mar 14, 2009 at 3:16 AM, Travis
travis+ml-cryptogra...@subspacefield.org wrote:
I have never seen a good catalog of computationally-strong
pseudo-random number generators. It seems that everyone tries to roll
their own in whatever application they are using, and I bet there's a
lot of
On Sat, Mar 14, 2009 at 3:16 AM, Travis
travis+ml-cryptogra...@subspacefield.org wrote:
I have never seen a good catalog of computationally-strong
pseudo-random number generators. It seems that everyone tries to roll
their own in whatever application they are using, and I bet there's a
lot of