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Date:      Wed, 5 Mar 2014 14:37:22 -0800
From:      Gary Kline <kline@thought.org>
To:        FreeBSD Mailing List <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   a low-level question; and one about ASCII solitaire [klondike]
Message-ID:  <20140305223722.GA17759@ethic.thought.org>

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=====
Organization: Thought Unlimited.  Public service Unix since 1986.
Of_Interest: With 27 years  of service  to the  Unix  community.



	guys,

	two, three weeks ago, I wrote this list about a solitaire
	game that did not involved X; it was simply ASCII: I found 
	it in ports around 1994-5 and played it on breaks, etc, etc. 
	--i *still* want to ask if anybody remembers playing Klondike
	where "9D"  == "9 of diamonds" and "KC" == "king of clubs";
	because it was easy to play and required only "hjkl" and 
	"spacebar."  but I just watched a short TED video that I 
	believe everyone  should watch.  

	I've been meaning to pose a more serious qstn about public-key
	encryption.  like:: will phil zimmerman's program still be 
	unbreakable for at least a few centuries?   --Sidebar: when I 
	first taught myself C {circa 1979} an early  program did 
	encryption.  it was slow on the pdp-11/70, but unless you 
	guessed the password, you were 99.97% out of luck.  sadly, like
	the solitaire program, it got lost.  

	Anyway, watch the following on "gov't surveillance, then read
	on. It mentions Linux as a target; that finally got me to write

http://on.ted.com/a038u

	===

	other than the stuff on jottings.thought.org that may be 
	"found" in a hundred years, I dont have much worth looking
	at.  I have//have HAD a hardware firewall for years, &c, &c.
	So: has any *BSD wizard invented any new crypto-ware *yet*.
	more important: anybody know where the ASCII klondike prog
	is?   ...save my shoulder.

	tia, y'all,

	gary





-- 
 Gary Kline  kline@thought.org  http://www.thought.org  Public Service Unix
             Twenty-seven years of service to the Unix community.




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