On 20Jul2008 00:08, Kay Schluehr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: | > Google was not my friend on this one, and I suspect there is no | > answer. | | Even the Great Google can't help if you don't use the right | keywords ;)
Actually, I was shown an useful Google search syntax the other day: Searching for: foo looks just for "foo", but searching for: ~foo matches similar words. This came up in a discussion of web sites that use badly chosen keywords (the NSW Police gun licensing information talks only about "firearms", making it surprisingly hard to find; not that I have or want a gun license, but it was the example discussed). Cheers, -- Cameron Simpson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> DoD#743 http://www.cskk.ezoshosting.com/cs/ Humans are incapable of securely storing high quality cryptographic keys and they have unacceptable speed and accuracy when performing cryptographic operations. (They are also large, expensive to maintain diffcult to manage and they pollute the environment.) It is astonishing that these devices continue to be manufactured and deployed. But they are suffciently pervasive that we must design our protocols around their limitations. - C Kaufman, R Perlman, M Speciner _Network Security: PRIVATE Communication in a PUBLIC World_, Prentice Hall, 1995, pp. 205. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list