I read about Richard Feynman and his girlfriend, during his time at Los Alamos, going out of their way to come up with more and more complicated cyphers for their personal letters to give the security guys a hard time. Sounded fun. I wonder what kind of heat you'd draw by sending a lot of encrypted emails to the Middle East. James On 1/19/06, Bob Axtell wrote: > > John Nall wrote: > > >Howard Winter wrote: > > > > > >>You aren't the only one - it arrived here a day or two ago, dated > >>July. Either Mark's system re-sent it for some reason, or it's been > >>hanging around on some street-corner of the Internet with its gang for > >>the past 6 months.. > >> > >> > > > >It arrived here only this morning (but dated July). I always keep my > >inbox on Thunderbird cleared after I have read the messages, either by > >deleting the ones that have been read, or by moving them to another > >folder. So it definitely popped into the inbox just this morning. > >Wonder where that puppy has been hanging out??? :-) > > > > > > > Yes, it JUST arrived. > > Homeland security up to their old tricks again, I guess. They delayed > some encrypted > firmware code for 6 weeks once. > > --Bob > > -- > Note: To protect our network, > attachments must be sent to > attach@engineer.cotse.net . > 1-520-850-1673 USA/Canada > http://beam.to/azengineer > > -- > http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive > View/change your membership options at > http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist > -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist