fubarx

@fubarx@lemmy.ml

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fubarx,

“It also includes optimized support for Raspberry Pi SBCs to deliver enhanced performance and compatibility.”

fubarx,

TPMs have been able to store encryption keys instead of having them stored on disk or embedded inside software. But TPMs were mostly connected to the main system via simple buses like I2C, SPI, or simple UART. People figured out that by sticking a cheap sniffer like the ChipWhisperer, it would be easy to read off those keys while in transit.

Even easier would be to MITM using methods like clock glitching, so they would return fake credentials and get access to everything.

The next generation TPMs allowed on-device private/public key creation using creative random number generation schemes and on-board crypto libraries that couldn’t be tampered with. But there was still the problem of keys going across those open busses.

To solve this problem, you need to have attestations between the main board and TPM which means storing multiple public keys and digital signatures from both sides, either during manufacturing or on first boot.

This way, if someone sniffs the wires, the data stream is asymmetrically encrypted. And with attestation, each side knows they are talking to only the right sender and receiver. Also, no two systems will have a common key, so even if someone de-caps a TPM2 module and gets the keys out, they can’t use it to compromise other devices.

This is where we’re at. Manufacturing and boot processes have to be modified to make sure nothing leaks out and everything stays put.

fubarx,

This is so strange.

There’s an AWS service called CodeArtifact (aws.amazon.com/codeartifact/) that’s literally designed to cache binary distributions so you don’t have to keep hitting origin repos.

fubarx,

I haven’t but my kid playing Osu! Lives and breathes the game. Used birthday gift money to buy a special three-button keyboard. Walks around all the time, tapping fingers on every surface.

fubarx,

How to give land more votes than people. Not long before election results are measured in number of acres.

fubarx,

A lot of Amazon used book sales go through Powells or AbeBooks.

Could just go direct.

fubarx,

Your basic small-engine pilot nightmare. That last big building was an extra heart-attack.

Glad they walked away safely.

fubarx,

Totally agree. I’m paying for beer, not foamy air. And out in these parts, there are no glasses with measuring lines.

Actually sat down and built a spreadsheet to figure out how much a bar or restaurant profited based on how much foam they pour. The numbers are eye-opening.

I’ll have to readjust the tables, though. Met friends at my favorite hangout last night. Overnight, they had bumped the price of a pint by $2 up to $10. May be time to find a new favorite hangout.

fubarx,

There are browser userscripts out there now that do this automatically.

fubarx,

So many old and new ones. But if I had to pick one: American Pie by Don McLean.

fubarx,

Not to worry. Someone will build a utility that flashes a spreadsheet image for a millisecond every time the system tries to take a snapshot.

fubarx,

Enterprises IT policy may have a say in that.

fubarx,

It’s Elmer’s Glue. Kindergartners have been chugging it for years. What’s the problem?

fubarx,

If you liked Apollo, you’ll really like Voyager for Lemmy: apps.apple.com/us/app/…/id6451429762

fubarx, (edited )

It’s cool tech that is ahead of its time. 5-10 years from now, a big tech company will make something like this and everyone will cry Huzzah!

Magic Leap went the same route.


Edit:

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Leap

Judging by the downvotes, I didn’t state my point well enough. Magic Leap took a LOT of money, got a lot of hype, and nearly went out of business multiple times.

But they were also the first ones to demonstrate and kick off overlaying data on top of real world, what we now call Augmented Reality. Their implementation was clunky and the device was expensive, but it showed people a glimpse of what was possible in a head-mounted, immersive form factor. 10 years later, Apple released the Vision Pro which used different tech, but did pretty much what ML1 was trying to do.

I think the Humane AI pin tried some interesting concepts, but is heading in the same direction. The idea of a small, wearable, AI device is interesting. Ten years from now, when you can run it all on-device and have a hands-free, GPT-8 level conversation with it with no cloud connection may well be a yawn.

fubarx,

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Leap

Judging by the downvotes, I didn’t state my point well enough. Magic Leap took a LOT of money, got a lot of hype, and nearly went out of business multiple times.

But they were also the first ones to demonstrate and kick off overlaying data on top of real world, what we now call Augmented Reality. Their implementation was clunky and the device was expensive, but it showed people a glimpse of what was possible in a head-mounted, immersive form factor. 10 years later, Apple released the Vision Pro which used different tech, but did pretty much what ML1 was trying to do.

I think the Humane AI pin tried some interesting concepts, but is heading in the same direction. The idea of a small, wearable, AI device is interesting. Ten years from now, when you can run it all on-device and have a hands-free, GPT-8 level conversation with it with no cloud connection may well be a yawn.

fubarx,

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Leap

Judging by the downvotes, I didn’t state my point well enough. Magic Leap took a LOT of money, got a lot of hype, and nearly went out of business multiple times.

But they were also the first ones to demonstrate and kick off overlaying data on top of real world, what we now call Augmented Reality. Their implementation was clunky and the device was expensive, but it showed people a glimpse of what was possible in a head-mounted, immersive form factor. 10 years later, Apple released the Vision Pro which used different tech, but did pretty much what ML1 was trying to do.

I think the Humane AI pin tried some interesting concepts, but is heading in the same direction. The idea of a small, wearable, AI device is interesting. Ten years from now, when you can run it all on-device and have a hands-free, GPT-8 level conversation with it with no cloud connection may well be a yawn.

fubarx,

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Leap

Judging by the downvotes, I didn’t state my point well enough. Magic Leap took a LOT of money, got a lot of hype, and nearly went out of business multiple times.

But they were also the first ones to demonstrate and kick off overlaying data on top of real world, what we now call Augmented Reality. Their implementation was clunky and the device was expensive, but it showed people a glimpse of what was possible in a head-mounted, immersive form factor. 10 years later, Apple released the Vision Pro which used different tech, but did pretty much what ML1 was trying to do.

I think the Humane AI pin tried some interesting concepts, but is heading in the same direction. The idea of a small, wearable, AI device is interesting. Ten years from now, when you can run it all on-device and have a hands-free, GPT-8 level conversation with it with no cloud connection may well be a yawn.

fubarx,

Edited my post to explain better.

fubarx,

Ballpark beer was $16 last year. Saw someone obviously inebriated grab 3 cups, then on their way back to the seat in the bleachers, trip and spill it all.

Many tears were shed.

fubarx,

Non-Brit questions:

  • What does the dissolution of Parliament mean as far as legislating until July 4th? Does everything come to a screeching halt?
  • When do MPs get to head out to campaign?
  • Does the dissolution affect the House of Lords in any way?
fubarx,

Thank you! That gives them a week to enact any last-minute laws.

In the U.S., this ‘lame duck’ period goes from November until January of each election year: brennancenter.org/…/what-happens-lame-duck-sessio…

fubarx,

Missed opportunity to show the huge overlap with delicious Mexican sauces: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mole_(sauce)

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