Auteur Sujet: xaso The Odd Truth, April 6, 2004  (Lu 5 fois)

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xaso The Odd Truth, April 6, 2004
« le: Décembre 22, 2024, 05:32:15 pm »
Idev Looks Like Honeywell Is Cooking Up Its Own Nest Thermostat Clone
  CBS News  NEW ORLEANS - A New Orleans police officer placed on desk duty following a deadly shooting incident was suspended for posting a comment on a local TV station s website calling Trayvon Martin a thug who deserved to die.Jason Giroir identified himself as a New Orleans Police Depar stanley cup deutschland tment employee when he posted a comment over the weekend on the WWVTV website in response to an article about a rally supporting Martin. He wrote,  Act like a thug die like one!  Martin, 17, was unarmed when he was fatally shot last month in Sanford, Fla., by a neighborhood watch volunteer.The Times-Picayune reports that when another commenter called Giroir s comments racist, Giroir responded:  Eddie come on down to our town with a  Hoodie  and you can join Martin in HELL and talk about your racist stories!:-P Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas announced Monday that Giroir has been suspended indefinitely without pay.         Included in those comments was that he was a member of the NOPD, which have caused me great concern concerning his fitness for duty,  Serpas said.  To say that I m angry is an understatement; I m furious,  Serpas said.  Let me be clear: the hard working m stanley romania en and women of the NOPD do not condone such statements. Giroir by those statements has embarrassed this department with insensi stanley water bottle tive, harmful and offensive comments. The NOPD s Internet policy says no employee should post anything that is illegal, or anything that embarrasses, humiliates, discredits, or harms the operati Bcvb The   8220;Lady Macbeth Effect  8221; Explains Why Bad People Wash Too Much
 The rele cups stanley ase of the film, The Imitation Game, about the life and work of Alan Turing, inspired the Guardian to publish this description of how the German encryption device worked鈥攁nd why, like all good cryptography, it was a simple concept that was a nightmare to break.     Part mechanical, part electrical, Enigma looked like an oversized typewriter. Input the first letter of your message on the keyboard, and then a letter lights up revealing what it has been replaced with in the encrypted message: Inside the box, the system is built around three physical rotors. Each takes in a letter and outputs it as a different one. That letter passes through all three rotors, bounces off a reflector at the end, and passes back through all t stanley cup hree rotors in the other direction. The board lights up to show the encrypted output, and the first of the three r stanley cup nz otors clicks round one position 鈥?changing the output even if the second letter input is the same as the first one. When the first rotor has turned through all 26 positions, the second rotor clicks round, and when that   made it round all the way, the third does the same, leading to more than 17,000 different combinations before the encryption process repeats itself. Adding to the scrambling was a plugboard, sitting between the main rotors and the input and output, which swapped pairs of letters. In the earliest machines, up to six pairs could be swapped in that way; later models pushed it to 10, and added a fourth rotor.