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I would encrypt anything sensitive that I would store on such a place.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/zd/20100426/tc_zd/250362
My first 'puter was a SWTP 6800 in 1975 while I was stationed in Germany, then a TRS-80, and then in 1979 my first disk based PC, Heathkit H89.
My first was a Commodore 64.
Encryption only protects against physical theft of the media the data is stored on, unless you're doing file encryption with yet another password on it. I have OneDrive and just use the Personal Vault which ties into my computer's TPM for authentication.
zzyzzx says
I would encrypt anything sensitive that I would store on such a place.
You should encrypt everything anyhow. Why not?
Encryption only protects against physical theft of the media the data is stored on, unless you're doing file encryption with yet another password on it. I have OneDrive and just use the Personal Vault which ties into my computer's TPM for authentication.
The problem with encryption is everyone uses encryption patterns that everyone else is using. If you get my drift.
If you take a file and randomly sift bits in that file, then store those shifts in a key file. Your average hacker would hit it with every encryption breaking software available to them, and never crack it. Roll your own algorythms and design your own encryption patterns, and don't blab about it. Make a process so hideously irregular, that the top IT Manager screams "That's not how you do it!"
Unique obfuscation is better than encryption. Encryption patterns are all known, all they have to is hack the key. They don't have to give the process a second thought.
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Patrick says
My first was a Commodore 64.
My was the Commodore SX-64, a C64 in a case with a 5in color monitor. I still have it.
Don't save things on disks or thumb drives if they are important. They degrade too easily. Instead use an external hard drive(s) that you can store in your safe. That's the most lossless tech we have outside of writing with DNA or engraving crystals with lasers.
Gateway 486. I was late to the game, and probably a bit younger than many of you.
Commodore 64 and then Amiga 500. I, too, still have these machines, though I will usually use an emulator just because it's so much more convenient.
Commodore 64 and then Amiga 500. I, too, still have these machines with hundreds of floppies
What roms do you use for the the Amiga emulator? It took me a few years to find them.
Can't say I miss the Amiga once I got it fired up. It was a great machine for it's time, today it just feels primitive.
You might to try out Aros in a vm only. There is a new RiscOS out too if you want to.play with that. RiscOS is actually usable.
https://www.riscosopen.org/content/
Anybody remember that there were two types of 3.4in floppies. a "DD" with 720k and an "HD" with 1.2 meg?
Do you mean the Kickstart ROMs? Or are you referring to the disk images that some people mistakenly refer to as ROMs?
I tried AROS once quite a few years ago, but don't remember it very well. There's other offshoots like Amithlon but I never really got into that one as it has limited hardware support.
I'm have all the kickstarts, EXCEPT for the the A2000
I'm impressed that HeadSet has a 2000, that machine wasn't out long and didn't sell too well.
I also have an Amiga 3000. That's a stylish looking system. It's also the first computer I ran Linux on back in the mid 90's. Kernel 0.9something if I recall.
As I recall, the Amiga 2000 sold in very high numbers because of the Video Toaster. The Amiga 3000 was what did not sell well, because they designed the case specifically not to accept the Video Toaster card, as Amiga did not want to be a one trick pony. Bad idea as sales crashed. The 3000 was kick ass though, I remember one guy at a user's group who had an Amiga 3000 set up running Mac OS in one window, Windows 3.1 in another window, along with the AmigasOS.
You ran Linux on an A3000??????
« First « Previous Comments 12 - 43 of 43 Search these comments
http://news.yahoo.com/s/zd/20100426/tc_zd/250362
My first 'puter was a SWTP 6800 in 1975 while I was stationed in Germany, then a TRS-80, and then in 1979 my first disk based PC, Heathkit H89.