Dug this from my old archives, after finding out it vanished from the Net.
Decade-old, but more truthful than before.
May it provide some inspiration.
--
Title: The Criminal
Lyrics by: Steve Brinich
Tune: The Idiot (Stan Rogers)
Date:
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http://online.wsj.com/article_print/0,,SB108137571973077200,00.html
The Wall Street Journal
April 8, 2004
PAGE ONE
For Guidance in Iraq,
Marines Rediscover
A 1940s Manual
Small-War Secrets Include:
Tips on Nation-Building,
The Care of Pack Mules
By GREG JAFFE
Staff Reporter of
I've been installing a Draytek Vigor 2900 router at work lately, and found a
line of models which do VoIP (router with analog phone jacks on them). They
also support VPN router-router, and come with DynDNS clients. I thought I've
seen VoIP over VPN being mentioned, but I can't find it right now.
On Thu, Apr 08, 2004 at 03:29:58PM -0400, R. A. Hettinga wrote:
At 11:28 AM -0700 4/8/04, Major Variola (ret) wrote:
Geodesic means shortest path, and you'll note if you play with
tracert that the shortest path (as seen on Earth's surface) is rarely
taken.
A pretty densely distributed radio
Well, I never claimed to be Einstein, but your 3 simple steps sound a hell
of a lot like my recipe for making a ham sandwich:
First, order a steak in a restaurant.
Second, tell them to add two slices of bread.
Third, tell them you don't want beef as the primary meat of your steak, you
want
--- begin forwarded text
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From: Mises Daily Article [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Mises Daily Article [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: What Brought on the French Revolution?
Date: Fri, 9 Apr 2004 09:15:18 -0400
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What's so good about it? :)Nature gave us one tongue and two ears so we could hear twice as much as we speak.To talk goodness is not good... only to do it is.
Cypherpunks, exceptional medications, low rates, best quality
http://crassly.wsmeds.com/d13/index.php?id=d13 toptail
Oh, love is real
And I'd like to see their
adwords facility struggling to come up with something appropriate when
the only legible text is BEGIN PGP ENCRYPTED MESSAGE.
Wow are you non-commercial :-)
All the spy stores, sec phone makers, disk encryptors, VPN vendors, etc
will be paying top dollar to get seen by
At 09:58 AM 4/9/04 -0400, Tyler Durden wrote:
Well, I never claimed to be Einstein, but your 3 simple steps sound a
hell
of a lot like my recipe for making a ham sandwich:
Hardly. One could put together a very slick drop file here for
encrypted net storage
script in a day. One could even
On Fri, 9 Apr 2004, Eugen Leitl wrote:
Internet is mostly a tree (if you look at the connectivity maps).
Not at all. A tree has a root; the Internet doesn't have one. Instead
you have several thousand autonomous systems interconnecting at a large
number of peering points.
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Meshnets (everyone's a router) is cool, admittedly. But are you going
to spend *your* battery life routing someone else's message?
Fixed P2P energy costs are trivial. Not so for mobile P2P.
And if your meshnodes are mains-powered, you have wires going there,
so wireless is less useful. Solar
Online medicines, at cheap prices.
Most places charge overprices, we don't. Quite a difference, huh.
You don't need to see a doctor to buy drugs from us.
Shipped to the whole world.Your solution is here: http://www.med1254.com/index.php?refid=44
-
The link below is for people who hate
On Fri, Apr 09, 2004 at 06:22:06PM +0100, Jim Dixon wrote:
On Fri, 9 Apr 2004, Eugen Leitl wrote:
Internet is mostly a tree (if you look at the connectivity maps).
Not at all. A tree has a root; the Internet doesn't have one. Instead
you have several thousand autonomous systems
On Fri, 9 Apr 2004, Eugen Leitl wrote:
Internet is mostly a tree (if you look at the connectivity maps).
Not at all. A tree has a root; the Internet doesn't have one. Instead
you have several thousand autonomous systems interconnecting at a large
number of peering points.
A
At 08:21 PM 4/9/04 +0200, Eugen Leitl wrote:
It should look a lot like a Golgi stain of your neocortex, though, the
Sorry the below is long, but its subscription only, and the comparisons
to man-made networks are worth reading.
Science, Vol 301, Issue 5641, 1870-1874 , 26 September 2003
At 10:43 AM -0700 4/9/04, Major Variola (ret) wrote:
Meshnets (everyone's a router) is cool, admittedly. But are you going
to spend *your* battery life routing someone else's message?
Only if they pay me cash.
:-)
Cheers,
RAH
--
-
R. A. Hettinga mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The
--- begin forwarded text
Delivered-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: voting, KISS, etc.
From: Perry E. Metzger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 09 Apr 2004 12:46:47 -0400
Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I think that those that advocate cryptographic protocols to ensure
voting
Actually, to some extent I did realize this, though I couldn't resist the
droll troll urge.
And of course, perpetual storage isn't really any kind of end-goal
itself...the 'goal' of course is to be able to securely store and move
information without fear (or the possibility due to anonymity)
At 8:29 PM +0100 4/9/04, Jim Dixon wrote:
Traffic was following a geodesic --
but not a geographic geodesic.
Right.
Geodesic is a topologic content. In three (two?) dimensions, a geodesic is
a great circle route across a sphere. In higher dimensions, it's something
else.
No. I don't know the
Eugen Leitl wrote:
I've been installing a Draytek Vigor 2900 router at work lately, and found a
line of models which do VoIP (router with analog phone jacks on them). They
also support VPN router-router, and come with DynDNS clients. I thought I've
seen VoIP over VPN being mentioned, but I can't
RAH wrote...
At 10:43 AM -0700 4/9/04, Major Variola (ret) wrote:
Meshnets (everyone's a router) is cool, admittedly. But are you going
to spend *your* battery life routing someone else's message?
Only if they pay me cash
Someone enlighten me here...I don't see this as obvious. I might certainly
Hello, you recently sent a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED].Due to an avalanche of hundreds of spam emails every day, we are now using a mailbox protection system to block unsolicited junk mail. Please click on the link below to verify your identity.Your message is in our inbox along with hundreds of
At 05:16 PM 4/9/04 -0400, Tyler Durden wrote:
(As an aside, although debt has to be -forgiven- after 7 years,
contrary to
popular belief it is not true that a debt has to be -forgotten-...I
know of
one credit major card company that will not accept 'new' cardmembers
that
didn't pay back what they
At 07:06 PM 4/9/04 -0400, Tyler Durden wrote:
RAH wrote...
At 10:43 AM -0700 4/9/04, Major Variola (ret) wrote:
Meshnets (everyone's a router) is cool, admittedly. But are you
going
to spend *your* battery life routing someone else's message?
Only if they pay me cash
Someone enlighten me
privacy wrote:
[good points about weaknesses in adversarial system deleted]
It's baffling that security experts today are clinging to the outmoded
and insecure paper voting systems of the past, where evidence of fraud,
error and incompetence is overwhelming. Cryptographic
Perry I agree with you on all *except* that you are prejudiced
against folks who are not mobile, have immobile dependants, are busy
or agoraphobes.
In-person voting doesn't resist graveyard voting much better than
lining up the meat.
One could say that in-person voting rewards those too lazy or
| privacy wrote:
| [good points about weaknesses in adversarial system deleted]
|
| It's baffling that security experts today are clinging to the outmoded
| and insecure paper voting systems of the past, where evidence of fraud,
| error and incompetence is overwhelming.
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