or so, with further scope for improvement. The very large storage
overhead remains, but can probably be reduced by half or so.
(*) Adam Aviv; he was an undergrad at Columbia, now pursuing his Phd with
Matt Blaze at UPenn...
-Angelos
On Jun 1, 2008, at 8:53 AM, Perry E. Metzger wrote
-02, Adam Aviv wrote:
I recently implemented SSARES directly in python and also added
parallelism to the searching. We can now search the a large inbox
(1000+) messages in about 2-4 minutes.
Not to rain on your parade, but 1,000 messages is *not* a large inbox
and 2 to 4 minutes is a very
to not only have
the client cache capability to searching, but also a server side
mechanism to compensate when accessing from multiple locations.
adam
On Tue, Jun 3, 2008 at 11:34 AM, Nate Lawson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Greg Black wrote:
On 2008-06-02, Adam Aviv wrote:
I recently implemented
On Tue, Jun 3, 2008 at 4:37 PM, Eric Cronin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Jun 3, 2008, at 11:51 AM, Adam Aviv wrote:
Depending on the level of protection you want, you could just add a
script to your .forward to encrypt your email before delivery using
PGP/GPG. However, this will leave
I saw this post on Avi Rubin's blog today about his preparation for
teaching a class of 5th graders cryptographic principles.
http://avi-rubin.blogspot.com/2010/03/teaching-cryptography-to-5th-graders.html
It is a nice post, and I thought the list would be interested despite
the lack of eliptic
on easy-to-use IPsec
Date: Wed, 28 Jul 2010 21:36:47 -0400
From: Steven Bellovin s...@cs.columbia.edu
To: Adam Aviv a...@cis.upenn.edu
On Jul 28, 2010, at 9:29 51PM, Adam Aviv wrote:
I couldn't help but notice this nugget of wisdom in your report:
[quote]
Public key infrastructures (PKIs