On Mon, January 6, 2014 2:33 am, R. Mattes wrote:
On Mon, 6 Jan 2014 01:28:58 +1100 (EST), Patrick
Shirkey wrote
IIUC there are some people who understand it very
well but the
application
of their knowledge is considered classified so it's not released
into the public domain if it is even written down anywhere. A bit
like RSA decryption used to be.
??? Must be good drugs over there ...
From the Wikipedia article on RSA:
Wikipedia. Instant truth Just add the complement set.
"The RSA algorithm was publicly described in
1977 by Ron Rivest, Adi
Shamir, and Leonard Adleman at MIT; the letters RSA are the initials
of their surnames, listed in the same order as on the paper."
Or do you want to claim that a way to _break_ RSA ("decryption") is
known but not published (i.e. there's a non-quantum algorythm to
solve "prime factorization").
People knew how to decrypt RSA before it was released. Just saying.
Besides that there is *nothing* to prove the solving factors of primes is
an inherently difficult task. Separately these days any company with a few
10's of thousands $$$ available can purchase the hardware to do the job
with brute force but there are other more subtle methods. Like the NSA
paying companies to use broken algorithms by default, etc...
But I digress.
The funny
thing is that the technology that can be created using this
technique would probably solve the energy crisis if this knowledge
was allowed to be used for civilian purposes like power stations. It
would probably also be useful for deep space exploration. ( Avatar
scale not Hubble scale )
gee, really good drugs ...
I guess you don't have the information that I have ;-) Lets go, bring out
the naysaying, heretical, finger pointing. Just let me get a shot in now
before it descends into truly dangerous territory.
Yo Mama is so fat they can't launch her into orbit , land her on the moon
and then return her to Earth.
Depends on the
fuel used of course. One thing we do know is the
humble pistol crab can generate impulses with the same heat
intensity
Over here, impulse is measured in "mass x velocity", neither of which
expresses "heat intensity" (in kelvin?). Care to elaborate?
The heat generated when the *snap* occurs is as hot as the surface of the
sun. Watch the video...
--
Patrick Shirkey
Boost Hardware Ltd