antipope.org
The Evil Business Plan of Evil (and misery for all) - Charlie's Diary
http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2015/05/the-evil-business-plan-of-evil.html
Being the blog of Charles Stross, author, and occasional guests . Forward to: New guest blogger: M. Harold Page. The Evil Business Plan of Evil (and misery for all). Note that I am too damned old to play startup chicken all over again, and besides I've got books to write. This is just an exercise in trying to figure out how to make as many people as possible miserable and incrementally diminish the amount of happiness in the world while. Here's a better example: speed cameras. Here's the commercial outco...
whatever.scalzi.com
Amazon Gets Increasingly Nervous – Whatever
http://whatever.scalzi.com/2014/08/09/amazon-gets-increasingly-nervous
A Brief Biography of John Scalzi. Availability for Interviews, Appearances, Writing Work and Optioning Existing Work. Books and Other Projects by John Scalzi. Guidelines for Publicity, Blurbing, Unpublished Work, Retweets, Guest Blogging, Charitable Solicitations, Autographing, Educational Use and School Assignments. Site Disclaimer and Comment Policy. The Canonical Bacon Page. The Scalzi Creative Sampler. A WORLD OF NEVERENDING HAPPINESS. Amazon Gets Increasingly Nervous. August 9, 2014. August 11, 2014.
cmille19.wordpress.com
Providing Online Help for Powershell Modules | Chad Miller's Old Blogsite
https://cmille19.wordpress.com/2010/02/04/providing-online-help-for-powershell-modules
Chad Miller's Old Blogsite. SQL Server, PowerShell and so on. The Powershell V1 to V2 Conversion. The T-SQL Hammer →. Providing Online Help for Powershell Modules. February 4, 2010. As a finishing touch for the SQL Server Powershell Extensions. So I need to find a free static web hosting service. But, my first task is to automatically create HTML pages. Generating Help HTML Pages. Finally, run Out-Html:. And viola, 126 html files are produced in a folder named help under the current directory. The HT...
blog.engelke.com
Web Crypto on my AndroidWear Watch | Charles Engelke's Blog
https://blog.engelke.com/2015/03/01/web-crypto-on-my-androidwear-watch
Charles Engelke's Blog. March 1, 2015. Web Crypto on my AndroidWear Watch. 8212; Charles Engelke @ 4:28 pm. I just tried out some of the live web crypto demos that I’ve blogged about. On my Moto 360. Watch Most of them read files which doesn’t seem to work on a watch (go figure). But the one that creates and stores key pairs. It’s a pretty terrible user experience given that the page isn’t even well designed for a phone, much less a watch, but it works. Is a game changer. Blog at WordPress.com.
blog.engelke.com
ber | Charles Engelke's Blog
https://blog.engelke.com/tag/ber
Charles Engelke's Blog. October 21, 2014. Web Crypto and X.509 Certificates. 8212; Charles Engelke @ 1:55 pm. If you are going to use cryptography in the browser, there’s a good chance you will want to deal with X.509 certificates. This post is going to get started by using the Web Cryptography API. To do two operations on certificates:. Import a public key from an X.509 certificate. Verify the certificate authority (CA) signature on an X.509 certificate. Of the Web Cryptography API, and RFC 5280. Defini...
blog.engelke.com
Saving Cryptographic Keys in the Browser | Charles Engelke's Blog
https://blog.engelke.com/2014/09/19/saving-cryptographic-keys-in-the-browser
Charles Engelke's Blog. September 19, 2014. Saving Cryptographic Keys in the Browser. 8212; Charles Engelke @ 2:39 pm. Prior posts here have used the Web Cryptography API. To encrypt and decrypt. Files, and to sign and verify. Them But those examples have no practical use because the. The sample code is available on Github. And a live demonstration. Is also available. But before jumping into coding, consider the risks of storing private keys in the browser. Property set to true. The API always allows pub...
blog.engelke.com
Symmetric Cryptography in the Browser – Conclusion | Charles Engelke's Blog
https://blog.engelke.com/2014/07/16/symmetric-cryptography-in-the-browser-conclusion
Charles Engelke's Blog. July 16, 2014. Symmetric Cryptography in the Browser Conclusion. 8212; Charles Engelke @ 8:36 pm. This series of posts. Is almost complete. We’ve created, imported, and exported AES keys and used them to encrypt and decrypt files, all inside a standard web browser using the new Web Cryptography API. All that’s left is to put it all together into a single web page. That’s what we’ll do now. The page and code discussed in here are available on Github. And as a live page. DOCTYPE htm...
blog.engelke.com
pbkdf2 | Charles Engelke's Blog
https://blog.engelke.com/tag/pbkdf2
Charles Engelke's Blog. February 14, 2015. Deriving Keys from Passwords with WebCrypto. 8212; Charles Engelke @ 1:02 pm. It has been quite a while since my last post. By the way, the Web Cryptography API has become a Candidate Recommendation. Since my last post. This and future posts will use the API as specified in that version. The changes from the earlier draft are mostly fixed typos and improved consistency. The Web Cryptography API supports two KDFs: HKDF-CTR. This makes sure that the browser suppor...
blog.engelke.com
androidwear | Charles Engelke's Blog
https://blog.engelke.com/tag/androidwear
Charles Engelke's Blog. March 1, 2015. Web Crypto on my AndroidWear Watch. 8212; Charles Engelke @ 4:28 pm. I just tried out some of the live web crypto demos that I’ve blogged about. On my Moto 360. Watch Most of them read files which doesn’t seem to work on a watch (go figure). But the one that creates and stores key pairs. It’s a pretty terrible user experience given that the page isn’t even well designed for a phone, much less a watch, but it works. Is a game changer. Blog at WordPress.com.
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