Re: NPR : E-Mail Encryption Rare in Everyday Use

2006-03-10 Thread Chris Palmer
Peter Saint-Andre writes: http://www.saint-andre.com/blog/2006-02.html#2006-02-27T22:13 1. Anonymity does matter. You might have heard of a little thing called the First Amendment. ;) It's great that you're proud of what you say, but no matter how proud you are, there could be bad, unfair

Re: NPR : E-Mail Encryption Rare in Everyday Use

2006-03-10 Thread James A. Donald
-- Victor Duchovni wrote: My claim is that, while indeed it is easier to set the initial barriers higher when you design with greater hindsight, and some of the tractable, but not widely deployed email security measures will be there in IM systems from the start, never the less IM systems

Re: bounded storage model - why is R organized as 2-d array?

2006-03-10 Thread Bill Stewart
At 10:37 AM 3/9/2006, Chris Palmer wrote: Right, but even though a 1.5GHz machine is a bit old (heh...) for a workstation, my dinky little Linksys WRT54GC wireless AP still needs to AES-encrypt a theoretical maximum of 54Mbps when I turn on WPA. Unless you're using your Linksys for