Archive - Jun 2003

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June 13th

Two Security Articles

I recently came across a couple good security-related articles that's well worth reading.

The first is an introduction to firewalls and backdoors, describing each type, listing examples, and providing tips. Also contains links to some very useful external resources. http://securityfocus.com/infocus/1701

The second article disusses real-time alerting with snort, the most popular open-source IDS (Intrusion Detection System). http://newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=03/06/09/1939256. It does not cover installation or initial configuration, however; check out the snort documentation for details on this.

802.11g Wireless Standard Finalized

After many years of development, the final draft of the 802.11g standard has been approved. 802.11g specifies wireless data rates of up to 54 Mbps, while maintaining backwards compatability with older (and slower) 802.11b products.

Full story

AMD Researchers Detail New High Performance Transistors

Researchers at Advanced Micro Design released details on new high-performance transistors that will be used as a building block for future microprocessor designs.

Using a combination of two new technologies, metal gates (made from Nickel Silicide) and fully-depleted silicon-on-insulators (FDSOI), researcher were able to demonstrate up to a 30% performance gain over today's transistors.

Much more information can be found in the Full story.

June 9th

The Samba Team announces Samba 3.0.0 beta1

The Samba Team is proud to announce the availability of the first beta release of the Samba 3.0.0 code base. While we are significantly closer to the final release, I will remind you that this is a non-production release provided for testing only.

Please read the full announcement for more information and changes since the 2.x series.

Magic Cube 4D

If you're on the lookout for a new headache-inducing puzzle, then look no further! This four-dimensional version of a Rubik's cube has
1,756,772,880,709,135,843,168,526,079,081,
025,059,614,484,630,149,557,651,477,156,
021,733,236,798,970,168,550,600,274,887,
650,082,354,207,129,600,000,000,000,000
possible combinations, so you can imagine that it'll take quite a while to solve. :-)

For more information, see the project's home page. Linux and Windows versions are available.