They have a lot of the Soviet weapons design bureaus. Not sure how many of the original designers are still around. The tricky bit will be refining enough uranium or plutonium in a war zone.
carpelbridgesyndrome
I'm supposed to be allocating work on Tuesday. Hopefully I get it done in the morning.
If you own the original it's only $10. Still not clear that it's worth $10 though.
Just don't come whining to me when he bombs Mexico as he's been promising. You helped.
You want Trump? This is how you get Trump
Or you can be the etherium guy: get pissy about in game horse armor and make a vehicle for even worse scams.
You don't leak a passwords database publicly on the Internet in good faith.
I remember at least one indie dev saying that they would prefer you pirate the game instead of using key resellers as they tend to cost the devs lots of time and money dealing with credit card fraud.
Mmm yes. 5 bit two's complement.
I shouldn't make fun of it we've definitly made some ISA that weird.
The issue here is that Schneier is discussing brute force forward computation of cryptography (IIRC of AES). Quantum computers don't iteratively attack primes by attempting to compute all possible primes. The current conventional computer attacks against RSA also aren't brute force hence why the advised size of an RSA key right now is 4096 bits.
This calculation only holds if there is no faster way than brute force iterating the entire key space.
Windows IIS probably from around the time of windows 8 so maybe 2012. Probably running on either windows server 2012 (like exchange, an active directory domain controller, or if you are unlucky sharepoint) or some weirdly configured appliance running windows 8 ish enterprise.
They likely would have needed to redesign all the controls and figure out the initiation sequences out again from scratch. The weapons in question were fitted with encrypted detonation controls developed with US assistance.