Mental Floss:
In this video, Numberphile digs into how the Enigma cipher worked, and initially how the daily codes were broken manually using guesswork, inference, and brute force. ... a fascinating exercise, relying on a few key bits of information: In the Enigma ... Plattsburgh Press Republican:
“Vision and deliverables were achieved by creating this topnotch public/private partnership,” he said. “It adopted key elements from our Lake Champlain/Saranac River Waterfront Plan. “The success of this collaboration will certainly serve as a model ... YouTube:
The Prime Number Theorem is explained. The natural logarithm is introduced using the logarithmic spiral to give you a better feeling for this type of growth. These come together to give us an intuitive feeling AND formula for how many primes exist as ... Smithsonian:
But numberphiles need not despair. Counting ... Anyone can then run the number through an encryption algorithm on a computer or dedicated encryption device to create a secret message. ... “You can make a huge number … ... say 2,000 decimal digits. YouTube:
Full Story: ... At 14m-15m, Youtube failed to render ... slide ... "In-situ Measurement Set-up at Spring-8." (Full copy of his slides are available on New Energy Times.) ... The Tech Report, LLC:
The more prime numbers we find, the harder it gets to find a new one. The latest prime number, discovered using the free Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search (GIMPS) software, is 22,338,618 digits long, over five million digits longer than the last one ...and more ... International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (blog):
PGP works by assigning each user a randomly-generated public key and a private key that are unique and unreadable. To send someone data using PGP, the recipient must have access to your public key. Data comes in many forms, from emails that use ... TechRepublic:
This may allow a nearby but remote attacker to inject a a bogus public key to determine the session key during the public-private key exchange. They could then conduct a man-in-the-middle attack and "passively intercept and decrypt all device messages, ... Daily Mail:
... not just us that can freak out when we ... solve a complex maths problem. The answer to ... is one divided by ... causes old-fashioned calculators to have a mechanical meltdown. A video shows a 1950s Facit ESA-01 pin-wheel calculator ... TechRepublic:
The problem facing Britain and its allies early in the war was that the Enigma machine used to encrypt Nazi military traffic could scramble a message in 158 million million million ways, and each day the settings used would be changed. On top of that ...
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WILL QUANTUM COMPUTERS BREAK ENCRYPTION?
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PUBLIC KEY CRYPTOGRAPHY: RSA ENCRYPTION ALGORITHM
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HOW THEY FOUND THE WORLD'S BIGGEST PRIME NUMBER - NUMBERPHILE
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