On Mon, 8 Sep 2003, Ron Johnson wrote: > On Mon, 2003-09-08 at 11:32, Doug McNaught wrote: > > "scott.marlowe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > > > On Mon, 8 Sep 2003, Bruno Wolff III wrote: > > > > > > > It is probably worth trying to spend some time trying to find a finite > > > > set of passwords that are guarenteed to be generators for all possible > > > > MD5 hashes (or at least those than can possibly occur), so that you can > > > > finish the computation in finite time. > > > > > > If I rememberate correctificantly, it would take more storage than all the > > > atoms in the universe to store all the possible md5 sigs. Or somthing > > > similarly large. But if it's an excuse to buy a massive storage array, > > > I'm all for it. :-) > > > > I think Bruno was making a funny... :) > > But any true geek will look for *any* excuse to buy more hardware. > > Also, if I remember properly, the estimates are that there are 10^70 > atoms in the known Universe. That equates to ~2^233.
Yeah, it may have just been atoms on planet earth or the solar system or something. Last estimate of atoms in the known universe was 2^150 or so. Of course, the universe is expanding :-) ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org