Comment: Re:Not really the best practice (Score 1) 154
Comment: Not really the best practice (Score 5, Informative) 154
Rather than an encryption gateway, having your email client handle encryption avoids the problem of man-in-the-middle attacks between the gateway and the client.
I don't have much reason to encrypt, but Thunderbird has my certificate installed and does my digital signing. This is not unusual for a modern email client.
Comment: Re:Already done. (Score 1) 96
Comment: Re:Xen's biggest obstacle right now (Score 2) 62
Comment: Re:Xen's biggest obstacle right now (Score 1) 62
Comment: That's why we have CyanogenMod (Score 2) 123
Comment: Still on my first $10 (Score 4, Informative) 123
As far as I can tell, I have all of the smartphone benefits without much of the cost.
Comment: Part of a series (Score 3, Informative) 644
Comment: Wanted: single-eye correction (Score 1, Insightful) 97
By the way, I've been told by doctors for at least 20 years that a magenta tint sometimes helps. This isn't really new art.
Comment: Spectral shift (Score 1, Informative) 97
Comment: Re:Maybe this is the reason (Score 0) 215
Well, the only implementation so far is floating-point. I suspect the fixed-point performance would be a lot better if we ever get that written. It can keep up with real-time on a Raspberry Pi or an old Atom laptop.
Comment: Only Chromosomes Matter (Score 0) 697
Correct me if I am wrong, but the technology we are talking about here is merely splicing some reconstucted sequences into existing human cells.
You don't have to synthesize the entire cell. Only the nuclear and mitochondrial chromosomes matter. If you can replace the ones in a normal cell, what you have after division is the primitive cell reborn. You have to do this to a lot of cells, and grow them for a while, to get one without significant damage.