I have one (or something equivalent) in my watch (Casio Pathfinder Wave
Ceptor). It synchronizes the time of my watch every night at midnight.
/shrug
--Tim
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of cdr
Sent: Sunday, June 01, 2008 11:26 AM
To: commun
-Original Message-
From: Robin Paulson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, April 29, 2008 6:29 PM
To: List for Openmoko community discussion
Subject: Re: .Mac like service
/snip
>alternatively, an application to sit
>on my pc and do all this stuff
>locally would be very useful
To add to
-Original Message-
From: David Pottage <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, April 09, 2008 8:15 AM
To: List for Openmoko community discussion
Subject: Re: Loosing your moko
On Wed, April 9, 2008 2:39 pm, Sebastian Billaudelle wrote:
> Yes, i think a "normal" hijacker has no skills to fl
All of this also pre-supposes that the phone is somewhere that gps can actually
function. You might also consider using cell tower location (i can't remember
what its called) to at least get a general area. I saw a demo of this concept
in the moble google maps application.
Another way to preve
On Nov 30, 2007 4:59 PM, Shawn Rutledge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Nov 30, 2007 1:34 PM, Michael Shiloh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > If Bob (or Alice) hands his (or her) phone to the other, then if both
> > phones are shaken in the same hand, the acceleration pattern might
> > provide an ex
Since everyone is dreaming of future things, why not add wireless usb to the
phone in a next generation device? Then you don't actually need a physical
connection to drive the display or keyboard/mouse/accessories.
Add to the 'laptop' package the ability to power/charge the phone via one of
the
On Sat, 6 Oct 2007 10:50, Mikkel Meyer Andersen wrote:
Hi,
/snip
Actually I think a knife would be more usable than a camera :-p
Regards,
Mikkel
Yeah.. But then you wouldn't be able to take it on a plane trip. And
people would be making horrible jokes like 'that's not a phone/whips
On Wed, 26 Sep 2007 8:57, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As far as I'm concerned, this should have ended last week. The original
question asked was "why continue with OpenMoko development when Qtopia
is available, faster, more complete and stable?". It was debated and
some pretty conclusive reason
On Sun, 26 Aug 2007 11:35, "Andraž 'ruskie' Levstik" wrote:
On 20:15:37 2007-08-26 "Edwin Lock" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
So you have to get used to it every time again? doesn't seem like a
very
good idea.
My experience is that people like to get used to things and do them
like the got us
On Sun, 26 Aug 2007 9:36, Lars Hallberg wrote:
Josef Wolf skrev:
[ I warm-up this old thread again... ]
On Mon, Mar 05, 2007 at 12:02:31AM +0200, Lars Hallberg wrote:
a mock-up on a 90-key by one stroke finger keyboard. Think this might
be an usable and pretty efficient input method.
http
On Thu, 26 Jul 2007 19:06, Mark Eichin wrote:
Ok, now I feel stupid. Guess you get to call me a muppet after all :-}
The batteries and cards were all wrapped together in one of the foam
cutouts. I don't know how I missed it this morning, when I got home I
went through every compartment to do
On Thu, 26 Jul 2007 12:32, Giles Jones wrote:
Anything and everything is possible.
Obviously, you mean this withing the realm of programming openmoko.
Otherwise, its a very broad and bold statement. /grin
--Tim
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OpenMoko community mailing lis
Err... That was supposed to br linux phone platform...
On Thu, 26 Jul 2007 8:35, Tim Newsom wrote:
I just noticed this:
http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS5539544742.html
They claim to have many of the features we have talked about on the
list... however, I am wondering about the "pe
I just noticed this:
http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS5539544742.html
They claim to have many of the features we have talked about on the list...
however, I am wondering about the "pending patent" related to placing
security in the bootloader for signature checking of a boot image. Does
anyone
On Mon, 23 Jul 2007 10:27, coomac wrote:
Rather than alienate one group over the other, why not have something
for both? A non camera version for those who don't need the feature as
well as a camera version with the exact same specs for those who can't
live without it? I mean, why have a chi
On Fri, 20 Jul 2007 17:47, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
/snip
user friendly to move between the 2.. Videos need atleast a converter
app
to run on windows to resample to something the neo can handle with the
simple push of 1 button..
/quietly patents 1-Click converting
--Tim
___
On Wed, 18 Jul 2007 17:02, Jeff Andros wrote:
I haven't used a mac other than casually (checking email) since os9...
so I'm not so up on growl. I'd like basically arbitrary code
execution, but with some (read LOTS) of protection on how that gets
registered (can't let Sean's dad install malwar
On Wed, 18 Jul 2007 12:10, Mark Rossman wrote:
First off I think the largest amount of time would be to calculate the
distance between each possible combination of points, and I think most
people wouldn't really have that many points anyway. Now if UPS
decides to offload their routing onto the
On Wed, 18 Jul 2007 12:51, Brad Pitcher wrote:
Actually, I was thinking of offloading that work to a mashup like
interface.. Say google maps or what not and just displaying the result.
But google maps doesn't reorder destinations to create the optimal path
does it?
No idea. That's why I sa
On Wed, 18 Jul 2007 11:27, Jeff Andros wrote:
On 7/18/07, Tim Newsom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
You could expand this a little and possibly select items from multiple
location lists and then select
"Find the shortest route to complete all tasks"
--Tim
just don't ex
On Wed, 18 Jul 2007 7:40, Marc Verwerft wrote:
On 7/18/07, Emre Turkay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm planning to use it to implement a GTD[1] utility.
Yes!
Consider there is a simple market-list application, in which I note
the stuff I need to buy from market, time to time. When I approach
OK.. Great minds think alike... Or maybe not. /grin
On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 12:11, Shawn Rutledge wrote:
How about simply the youPhone, or uPhone?
On 7/16/07, Ian Darwin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I completely agree. My idea is to make two advertisment campains:
one on
"maisntream media": may
On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 11:28, Daniel Bartholomew wrote:
Well, since Apple has gone iThis and iThat with everything and dropped
their use of PowerThis and PowerThat, why not co-opt that?
How would you like a PowerPhone?
--
Daniel Bartholomew
Well, in a similar vein (throwing in my own silly tho
On Thu, 12 Jul 2007 9:42, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Or hack a USB socket onto one of the many discarded 5V chargers you
have lying
around. If your house is like mine, they seem to show up out of
nowhere.
Michael
So that's what happens to all of the 5v chargers I place in the drying
machi
ul 2007 12:55, Mikko Rauhala wrote:
su, 2007-07-08 kello 12:00 -0700, Tim Newsom kirjoitti:
Um... Japan does have GSM service... I am positive as I recently had
guests in my house from japan. They brought their cell phones and I
showed them how to make them work in the US.
Means nothing. Th
Um... Japan does have GSM service... I am positive as I recently had
guests in my house from japan.
They brought their cell phones and I showed them how to make them work
in the US.
As far as I know... Granted, making them work in the us meant dropping
the 3g and switching to GSM service... B
On Fri, 6 Jul 2007 12:25, Wolfgang S. Rupprecht wrote:
Another good reason from an open-source product. Maybe there is a
vast untapped market for selling open-source phones to the governments
of the world (to protect them from the other governments of the
word. ;-))
-wolfgang
Except that as
Note...
I did ask about permission and we were told to wait on discussing with
official personel till phase 2 of the phone. So scanning the actual
case and building a knockoff would (in my opinion and until I am
corrected by FIC / Sean or other person with some authority) be a
violation of t
On Tue, 3 Jul 2007 12:56, Matthew S. Hamrick wrote:
Also.. to follow up on what Adrian recently said.. The tech shop also
has a CNC milling machine. I'm no expert, but I believe that the idea
is that you put a CAD file in one side and take out a completed part
out the other. So... if you hav
On Tue, 3 Jul 2007 12:07, Matthew S. Hamrick wrote:
Oh... but doesn't PETN have some issues with long-term durability when
exposed to UV?
On Jul 3, 2007, at 11:04 AM, Jeffrey Thomas wrote:
Clear soda bottles are fairly strong and not nearly as brittle as some
other clear plastics.
True en
On Tue, 3 Jul 2007 11:24, Sean Moss-Pultz wrote:
Dear Community,
Michael Shiloh has volunteered to setup a booth at Ubuntu Live
(http://www.ubuntulive.com) July 22 to 24 in Portland, Oregon. He'll be
demoing and talking about both the platform and the Neo. If you're in
town, please stop by!
Th
Or how about this... Cases from recycled materials..
Neo1973.. Free your phone, open your horizons, save the world...
Good for you, great for the environment.
--Tim
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http://lists.openmoko.
That's not necessarily true.. Look at plastic bottles.
Clear soda bottles are fairly strong and not nearly as brittle as some
other clear plastics. Plus, that plastic is useful as injection
material.
Plus, if it were cheap enough to get new cases, most people would not
care if they dropped o
There are several types of clear plastic which could be used to fulfill
this idea.. Both as plastic injection and liquid casting material.
--Tim
On Tue, 3 Jul 2007 9:50, Shakthi Kannan wrote:
Hi,
On 7/3/07, Ben Burdette <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Case modding for phones, cool.
Maybe we sho
On Tue, 3 Jul 2007 9:50, Michael Sersen wrote:
About custom case design for the Neo and beyond; I am very interested
in this idea. I have a cnc router at my disposal and can make custom
parts from materials such as Corian and exotic hardwoods and some soft
metals. I'd love to see some spec's,
On Tue, 3 Jul 2007 8:59, no_use wrote:
these are exactly the reactions i got from my friends.. specially as
the
mainbord seems rectangular, i wouldn't like to see it with this rounded
top and bottom..
..and all i want is 3G.. :(
So add case design ideas to the wiki where previously noted.
I
I have been thinking a little more about this and I struck upon an
idea... What if you could buy a custom case with a custom message on
it.
I am not talking about painted messages but letters and shapes cast into
the plastic shell.
Raised, sunk, custom fonts etc.
Naturally we can't just repl
On Tue, 3 Jul 2007 4:01, Robin Paulson wrote:
excuse my ignorance, but do you mean a 3d scanner as in a device for
measuring a 3d object?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3D_scanner
if you do, and have a Neo, that would be awesome. any chance of using
it to produce an electronic model of the case
On Mon, 2 Jul 2007 17:39, Robin Paulson wrote:
I have added a sub-section to the Neo1973 hardware section of the
wiki, concerning alternate cases. there are a few ideas as starters,
including one with a d-pad and a steampunk design. Anyone with any
other ideas/more info to flesh out what i've pu
Sean,
Supposing some company decided to provide alternate case designs or add
on products for the neo1973, who do they need to talk to about branding
/ authorization to sell them to the public?
OR
Is it possible that FIC or the OpenMoko company will have a section on
their sales page suppor
Hehe, I know that.. I was mentioning it for the benefit of the previous
person who was asking about joysticks.
--Tim
On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 19:22, Steven ** wrote:
Someone has already mentioned on this list about using the Wii
Nunchuck. Apparently it will connect to the I2C fairly easily. Search
There's also the possibility of adding some kind of attachment to a
specially designed battery or backpack which could add this ability by
interfacing with the I2C or SPI ports available.
--Tim
On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 16:43, Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
Kenshin writes:
I think there is a huge benefict in
eated.. Does that make any sense?
--Tim
On Wed, 27 Jun 2007 5:49, Vladimir Giszpenc wrote:
On 6/27/07, Tim Newsom wrote:
This could provide the xaml parser for use in an interface design some
of us have spoken about.
Separating the interface from the actual code that processes the
events... Or t
This could provide the xaml parser for use in an interface design some
of us have spoken about.
Separating the interface from the actual code that processes the
events... Or that's how I understand it.
Its a truely awesome development.
--Tim
On Tue, 26 Jun 2007 19:58, Vladimir Giszpenc wrote:
H
Oh... And the neo1973 will probably be sold at some FIC site ... I
mean... OpenMoko is not just for the neo1973 and they are only related
because OpenMoko can run on the neo1973.
Indeed, suns new java phone os and probably windows mobile will also run
on the device.
Plus, since its an FIC phon
OR... They could have it being developed on an internal developer
machine and not go live till they are ready.
On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 18:07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
...Guess the OpenMoko Web Store URL!
Sooner or later, they have to start selling. But from where?
webstore.openmoko.org??
store
On Wed, 13 Jun 2007 11:15, John Seghers wrote:
Tim Newsom wrote
As I understand it, you would not even need to build a different svg
file. You could use the same one and it could automatically scale
because the engine would scale it.. It should be possible (in my
mind)
to take a layout
On Wed, 13 Jun 2007 7:08, Emre Turkay wrote:
On 6/13/07, Peter A Trotter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If the application is then used on a different form factor device you
can
simply produce a new SVG file. All the UI script and images are linked
to
the SVG.
This also gives us a nice separatio
On Wed, 13 Jun 2007 4:52, Buddy wrote:
On 6/13/07, Emre Turkay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 6/12/07, Tim Newsom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
This is where XAML or XUL are particularly suited.
The idea is that the UI will be mostly svg commands or in some cases
images..
This is where XAML or XUL are particularly suited.
The idea is that the UI will be mostly svg commands or in some cases
images.. But rendered completely by the engine. Look up what you get
for using it and you will see what I am talking about. There is work to
be done getting XAML to function
its to this approach, IMHO. Separating the
interface allows us to experiment with a number of different
interface technologies. And the only thing the experimenters need to
know is the semantics and syntax of the XML interface.
-Cheers!
-Matt H.
On Jun 11, 2007, at 9:18 AM, Tim Newsom wrote:
If we ar
From what I read, the LIPS group is creating an 'open' standard. The
impression I got from that was the other phone standards group was
'closed' whatever that means.
If we are going to back a group, maybe FIC should join it and help in
the development process of the standard. None of the memb
If we are heading in the direction of web interfaces, I think we should
look at XAML or XUL or something similar. From what I can tell, they
will be adding silverlight support to mono, so using XAML will be
possible. This also separates the code for functionality from the
interface and can al
Ok.. before you take my head.. here is an interesting design idea i found
online. Idea only.. and yes I realize that this version runs a windows
operating system.
http://www.windowsfordevices.com/news/NS3731349953.html
Most of us are looking for multi-functional devices and will probably carry
#x27;s hope OpenMoko and the FIC Neo1973 will be successful and FIC
produces more open phones in future.
2007/6/7, Tim Newsom <[EMAIL PROTECTED] >:
Hmm... I thought it listed wifi and bluetooth on samsungs website...
--Tim
On Thu, 7 Jun 2007 8:57, Mark McClellan wrote:
nice. very ni
eally seem comparable. No wifi and no bluetooth.
And the screen is even smaller and lower resolution than the iPhone.
-Steven
On 6/7/07, Tim Newsom < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Has anyone else seen the samsung F700?
Its features are pretty nice... No idea on the OS but I would definit
Has anyone else seen the samsung F700?
Its features are pretty nice... No idea on the OS but I would definitly
take one over an IPhone... If it performs anything like it looks...
Hehe.
Its got very good specs.
--Tim
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OpenMoko community mailing li
Plus.. With all of the harassment we (the interested techies) are
providing about slipping dates... Imagine what the public backlash could
do?
Maybe too much publicity too early can be harmful?
--Tim
On Wed, 6 Jun 2007 17:15, Tehn Yit Chin wrote:
There is PR for the geeks and then there is PR
AhI see. /shrug.
--Tim
On 6/5/07, David Schlesinger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I am sure Jobs and company are not blind to
>the strength of open source software and the
>boon it would provide if they made a freely
>available dev kit for the phone.
As someone who worked at Apple for ten y
ity and ease of
use which drive consumer adoption... (From my point of view anyway).
--Tim
On Tue, 5 Jun 2007 17:35, kenneth marken wrote:
Todd W wrote:
From: "Tim Newsom" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
So apparently Jobs decided to allow 3rd party software on the phone
after all... Intere
So apparently Jobs decided to allow 3rd party software on the phone
after all... Interesting development.
--Tim
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On Tue, 5 Jun 2007 7:52, Mauro Iazzi wrote:
On 05/06/07, Tim Newsom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If your tracking movement with 2 3D accelerometers... What would
another
one provide.
As far as I can tell (I am not an expert...)
Tracking all 6 vectors will tell you absolute movement in
If your tracking movement with 2 3D accelerometers... What would another
one provide.
As far as I can tell (I am not an expert...)
Tracking all 6 vectors will tell you absolute movement in space. I.e,
when 2 vectors point in the same direction with the same magnitude at
approximately the same
d the Sidekick3 dimensions...
http://www.sizeasy.com/page/comp/1842
-Pete
On 16/05/07, Jose Manrique Lopez de la Fuente <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
Hello,
I've just done a fast "sizeasy" comparison:
http://www.sizeasy.com/page/comp/1840
And, yes, the Neo1973 is big!
2007
On Tue, 15 May 2007 22:15, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 15 May 2007, Tigran Zakoyan wrote:
Jason Elwell wrote:
I dont know whats more sad... You creating a paperdoll of an
OpenMoko, or
the fact that I downloaded it and made one for myself! LOL!
Me too :) BTW, can't agree 1973 is
No problem.. It was more of a rhetorical(sp?) question anyway. I was
just trying to point out that the situation was a bit different.
--Tim
On Tue, 15 May 2007 18:41, Robin Paulson wrote:
ahh, damn gmail shitesorry tim
from trolltech.com
"Q. Did Trolltech design the phone? Are there othe
On Tue, 15 May 2007 18:16, Ian Stirling wrote:
FIC is not a small company. http://www.fic.com.tw/about.htm Over 5000
employees isn't small.
Smaller than Nokia/Sony, sure. But they are well over 20 times the size
of Trolltech, who launched the greenphone.
Ahh.. But who manufactured the har
On Mon, 30 Apr 2007 11:56, Steven ** wrote:
/snip
I don't understand. Of course I'll want MythTV on my phone (iPhone or
Neo). I'm not going to buy Apple TV because I already have MythTV
setup and doing everything I want and more. I intend, at the very
least, to use my Neo as a remote control
On Tue, 24 Apr 2007 13:58, Matthew S. Hamrick wrote:
BTW... I tried this out, it seems to work fine.
It still feels "wrong" to intentionally leave an HTTP connection open
like this, but it seems to work okay when I test it.
I'm building some new javascript for the jowles interface that uses
On Tue, 17 Apr 2007 8:25, Peter A Trotter wrote:
Hopefully not wading in half cocked here but...
AFAIK non of the major web browsers implement threading for their
javascript engines, or at least not within a single window. Hence when
your asynchronous call returns it does not get executed unt
On Tue, 17 Apr 2007 3:54, Alexander E Genaud wrote:
Tim,
I believe Microsoft created the non-standard XMLHttpRequest object
through Active X around IE 5 but it has become something of a standard
implemented by Firefox, Safari/Konquerer, Opera, and perhaps others.
I've been using a nice wrapper,
On Mon, 16 Apr 2007 13:58, Matthew S. Hamrick wrote:
Okay.. a few points:
Q. javascript? on a phone? Isn't that going to suck down the power?
A. in a word, yes. But I think the main problem will not be the added
overhead of using javascript, it's going to be the frequent request /
respons
On Tue, 10 Apr 2007 6:12, Dean Collins wrote:
Yep, coding easy to do however issues are-
Mapping of roads and associated speed limits, almost non existent in
the
commercial space let alone in the open source space.
Regards,
Dean Collins
Cognation Pty Ltd
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
+1-212-203-4357
On a related note to all of this sms talk... Can you send an sms with
delivery receipt to a range of addresses and get back notification for
all phone numbers which actually exist? (Obviously it will be one at a
time, not boradcast)
Or does it just return success once it changed network provid
On Fri, 6 Apr 2007 11:22, Jonathon Suggs wrote:
Ok, I'll be honest that I have no proof that this is how it actually
works, but I don't think it works the way you are saying it does.
Again, not 100% positive, but the "receipt" that you receive is only a
message that it has been successfully t
On Fri, 6 Apr 2007 9:41, Martin Raißle wrote:
Is it possible to turn delivery reports off?
--Tim
I think it's not .. at least not for the receiver of a message ...
martin
That seems weird... Even in email you can turn off read receipts... It
seems like an invasion of sort (though a minor on
On Fri, 6 Apr 2007 8:35, Andreas Kostyrka wrote:
You cannot block them. But you can make the phone completly ignore it.
OTOH, that's not the same thing because combined with a delivery
report, somebody else can see when you turn your phone on :(
Andreas
Is it possible to turn delivery reports
On Fri, 23 Mar 2007 7:38, Gabriel Ambuehl wrote:
On Friday 23 March 2007 15:25:24 Tim Newsom wrote:
KISS and just encrypt whole files or keep whole files in plaintext. So
either
that note application saves its file into the unencrypted tree or the
encrypted one but mixing data inside files
On Fri, 23 Mar 2007 2:13, Gabriel Ambuehl wrote:
I'm not entirely sure why one would need a new FUSE driver then.
Can't you just use encfs (I gather you don't want LUKS because it needs
setting Filesystem size in advance and I can see why one would want to
avoid
that [1]) and tell the apps to
On Thu, 22 Mar 2007 12:13, Tim Newsom wrote:
On Thu, 22 Mar 2007 10:17, Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
Thoughts?
From what I remember of the discussions so far, that seems to meet the
majority of requirements for encrypted file storage and also manages
many of the things related to authentication
On Thu, 22 Mar 2007 10:17, Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
Thoughts?
From what I remember of the discussions so far, that seems to meet the
majority of requirements for encrypted file storage and also manages
many of the things related to authentication that we have been
discussing. Now, if we can spe
On Wed, 21 Mar 2007 14:59, Henryk Plötz wrote:
Moin,
Plus: If you really want per-file encryption that would only need some
minimal modifications to the existing solutions. Or use unionfs.
That's very interesting and opens up lots of potential.
Your right, key management along with many other
On Wed, 21 Mar 2007 14:35, Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
But it has the "encryption jail" drawback.
So maybe one way to deal with these issues is to build out the framework
by constructing a new api for reading and writing data based on this
provider concept.. Including the authentication. Then deal
On Wed, 21 Mar 2007 14:35, Jonathon Suggs wrote:
My challenge is just to think bigger. Think how this could be
incorporated to work with *any* phone. Then you can have a much larger
group of people to brainstorm, test, and bugfix. We have enough
protocols and standards to support. Creating
On Wed, 21 Mar 2007 13:03, Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
Hope my notes above are helpful...
Hehe that's great. At least I am certain that you and I are on the same
page now. I thought from my very quick glance at truecrypt that it
could encrypt individual files also but I have not had a hard look and
On Wed, 21 Mar 2007 9:34, Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
Tobias Gruetzmacher writes:
Right -- these look like good approaches, but to a different problem.
/please excuse my direct manner.. Its just how I write (smile)
What do you mean by different problem? Maybe I don't fully understand.
The way I se
On Wed, 21 Mar 2007 1:33, Gabriel Ambuehl wrote:
I don't really see why one would want to use Truecrypt when there's
been LUKS
in the Linux kernel for years now...
Well, for one I had never heard of LUKS till earlier yesterday. Now I
will have to go check it out. (Grin)
--Tim
After reading about truecrypt on slashdot I think that could pose as a
suitable start to the encryption solution... At least as a starting
place to build a framework on and test out some ideas.
--Tim
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On Tue, 20 Mar 2007 8:12, Jim McDonald wrote:
Tim Newsom wrote:
[Encryption options]
Yep I understand that there are lots of possibilities and options, I
just think that if something ships by default it should provide end
users with a very simple dialog that is basically an on/off switch
On Tue, 20 Mar 2007 2:08, Jim McDonald wrote:
Tim Newsom wrote:
The best part is that if you don't want it, you don't use it. And
those that do want it, can use it and its all completley transparent
to the applications.
But not at all transparent to the end user. Again assuming
On Mon, 19 Mar 2007 22:09, Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
I like this -- except it doesn't quite match my sample-of-one user
study. My degree-of-security-wanted is by data, not by application.
The same app is used for things like VINs and tire sizes and oil
filters for cars (no security) and for student p
On Mon, 19 Mar 2007 18:25, Jim McDonald wrote:
Clare Johnstone wrote:
On 3/20/07, Jim McDonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
continually asking the user to decide which data is to be encrypted and
which not.
There is the concept of "folders" which could be used :)
clare
True, but that's just
On Sun, 18 Mar 2007 18:05, Henryk Plötz wrote:
Moin,
/snip
Some feedback will be necessary so the user can see that the gesture
was correctly detected before sending the PIN to the SIM. I propose
some
sort of bubblebabble-digest.
--
Henryk Plötz
Grüße aus Berlin
~ Help Microsoft fight so
Sorry, got caught in the reply to issue.
-Original Message-
From: Tim Newsom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Possible security hole for Dialers/troyan horses
Date: Mon, 5 Mar 2007 7:02:58 -0800
On Mon, 5 Mar 2007 0:05, Evgeny wrote:
On Fri, 2007-03-02 at
On Fri, 2 Mar 2007 6:09, Evgeny wrote:
It still Linux based phone — there is absolutely no real-life viruses
for Linux at this time, trojans are possible treat, but user have to
install them by himself.
That's a pretty strong statement.. Are you absolutely sure there are no
viruses for linux
On Thu, 1 Mar 2007 14:42, Tomasz Zielinski wrote:
2007/3/1, mathew davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
then give it a rating of some sort 1 - being safe/trusted program and
10 -
being known bad binary/ don't use at any cost unless you really want
bad
things to happen.
Well, nobody will recognize di
On Sat, 24 Feb 2007 23:45, Richard Bennett wrote:
On Sunday 25 February 2007 01:59, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Students will have access to the hardware via JTAG, and more via the
lunchbox.
Yesterday photos were shown of the lunchbox. Sean said they were
thinking of
changing the name to som
On Mon, 19 Feb 2007 21:35, ryan lerch wrote:
hi all,
just a friendly reminder that we are getting a lot of people
subscribing to and posting to this community list that may not know
all the mailing list etiquette that you do.
So please be nice to these new-comers, and be patient with them;
*
While the phone is not on a call, can we use the gsm audio codec or
other hardware/software to do useful work? For instance, decoding of
some audio file or something like that.
I know we don't have access to the bare metal of the chip, but its
probably at least an arm processor with some dsp
phone?
On Fri, 2 Feb 2007 9:29, Mikko J Rauhala wrote:
On pe, 2007-02-02 at 09:06 -0800, Tim Newsom wrote:
If we have access to the mic and speakers while a call is in process,
and we have the ability to record conversations etc... Where does the
processor sit in that chain? Can we consume the
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