... I'm a little skeptical about this. What equipment would customers use? (If you say PCMCIA cards, do they have enough antenna gain?) What are the support...
... Bob Syputa is a regular contributor on SeattleWireless list. He writes a lot about 802.16 http://seattlewireless.net/archive/ezmlm.cgi?aas:7523:200204#b He...
... 802.16 will be used for commercial wireless last mile; 802.11 will be used for community networks. Nothing to worry about. ... Do the Atheros chipsets use...
I've taken to heart some of the recent security discussions and comments and tried to think deeply about viruses and the new worlds of p2p/decentralized...
... for a ... Michael, doesn't every virus provide incorrect identitiy information? At least to the computers it is running on. A common virus strategy is to...
Rainer, That's an important difference that needs to be clarified and emphasized: An identity virus is different from a traditional computer virus in that an...
P.s. I see your idea as a link or overlap between the two: that some traditional viruses use executable code to use or create incorrect identity information...
... some ... running the ... else ... on ... Michael, since the "identity thing" you mentioned has neither code nor malicious intent behind it, I wouldn't call...
Michael I guess what you are saying is that an identity virus exists, and propagates because a) it lives in a system that supports propagation b) propagation...
Rainer, A virus doesn't have to be malicious to be virus. The most common definition I've found for a computer virus is simply: "A computer virus is...
Hi Andy, My question is: Are "Identity Viruses" a valid new strain or type of computer virus? "Identity collisions" is a subtype I haven't considered fully. ...
Re: I believe "mimicry" is what you're talking about. Mimicry and/or identity collisions are certainly aspects of this (see my reply to Andy's email). My real...
... infects ... effort ... OK, accepted. But there is still a lack of executable code. If the identity virus would be some ACTIVE object carrying the ident...
Perfect analogy!! "Like a [virus] being transported around the body until it reaches a spot where it causes trouble". ... From: vrtprj [mailto:mail@...]...
Today I heard the tail end of an interview with Notre Dame professor Albert-Laszlo Barabasi (http://www.nd.edu/~alb/). I thought his research and book would...
ear Colleagues, We are pleased to invite you to participate in the upcoming IEEE Computer Society's Task Force on Cluster Computing (TFCC) sponsored: 2nd...
(Assuming there is wireless Internet connectivity at the conference - I haven't checked), I am again publishing an invitation (attached) to the personal Groove...
Groove only runs on Microsoft Windows, correct? and Radio Userland, only runs on the MSIE browser, right? I would appreciate the judgments of this community,...
Todd Boyle wrote ... True. GN did do a trial for Unix, but I think it was more as a proof of concept with a suggestion as to the amount of work needed to...
Andy et al, ... It's easy enough to use VMWare to set up a windows virtual machine. They provide a fully-functional 30 day trial version which I'm finding...
Todd, An alternative to Radio Userland could well be: Greymatter (http://www.noahgrey.com/greysoft/) Moveable Type (http://www.movabletype.org/) Regards, ...
... Radio works with all browsers with which I've tried it (MSIE, Mozilla, Netscape 6, K-Meleon, and Opera 5)--not to discourage discussion of alternatives,...