Probably not worth emulating a Pentium4 in Java, however, there is bochs to start from. I don't think it does P4 emulation yet, but open source, yadda, yadda, cypherpunks write code, yadda, yadda. :)
----------------------Kaos-Keraunos-Kybernetos--------------------------- + ^ + :NSAs budget is about|Passwords are like underwear. You don't /|\ \|/ :$20 Billion USD/year|share them, you don't hang them on your/\|/\ <--*-->:and they didn't stop|monitor, or under your keyboard, you \/|\/ /|\ :9-11 from happening.|don't email them, or put them on a web \|/ + v + :I want a refund! |site, and you must change them very often. [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.sunder.net ------------ On Thu, 11 Jul 2002, Albion Zeglin wrote: > Similar to DeCSS, only one Palladium chip needs to be reverse engineered and > it's key(s) broken to virtualize the machine. Simulate a Pentium VI in Java and > all extant code could be accessed. Similarly, is Microsoft's signing keys were > cracked then any code could be signed. > > If the software needs a real-time connection to the internet though, then > protection could be built into it. Laptop applications would be vulnerable > until we have pervasive wireless connection. > > How many bits do you think MS will use for the keys? > > Albion.