From: DANIEL CHARPENTIER <drcharpe@hamlet.uncg.edu>
To: cypherpunks <cypherpunks@toad.com>
Message Hash: 338bf0c48ad5ecbd99adabb36f86cb15d7084fdd197f82f3065243676d845e78
Message ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.951206141124.5233C-100000@hamlet>
Reply To: <199512061921.NAA00167@cdale1.midwest.net>
UTC Datetime: 1995-12-06 19:26:46 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 6 Dec 95 11:26:46 PST
From: DANIEL CHARPENTIER <drcharpe@hamlet.uncg.edu>
Date: Wed, 6 Dec 95 11:26:46 PST
To: cypherpunks <cypherpunks@toad.com>
Subject: Re: PGP
In-Reply-To: <199512061921.NAA00167@cdale1.midwest.net>
Message-ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.951206141124.5233C-100000@hamlet>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
On Wed, 6 Dec 1995, David E. Smith wrote:
> Firstly - and don't take this personally - how much computer
> knowledge do you have? The PGP sources use all sorts of
> #ifdefs and other kludges. A fair amount of C coding
> ability is needed to get the damn things to do much of
> anything. (Hell, I can't read most of it - my precompiled
> MSDOS version does what I need it to do.)
Sorry...I was always taught that the user should not
be mandated to finish the job of the programmer. Please,
do not take me wrong, PGP is a remarkable tool...but I
was not aware I had iron out the bugs. That part is the
easiest to do compared with the genius of the program...
but I still should not have to do it.
> If you make PGP more user friendly... well, PGP 3.0 is still
> coming Real Soon Now (TM) and it will include an API that
> will make hooking into it ridiculously simple. Beyond that,
> there are already a number of good DOS and Windows shells
> for it, and nobody on unix-flavoured systems expects a clean
> user interface anyway :) (Well, except for XWindows...)
Well maybe they ( people on "unix-flavoured systems" ) should
expect a clean interface. If the interface were more sound then
maybe the common man ( person ) wouldn't be so scared of it. I have
a lot of friends that gave up on cryptography because they could not
get the darned programs to work ( at least the good ones anyway ).
> And the key values - well, you can give it 32k bits, but 1.
> generating a key pair could take a prohibitively long time;
> 2. nobody else can use it (the default PGP distributions
> are capped off at 2047 bits).
I was not using 32k bit keys with PGP...but I'll look at the
code. To tell you the truth I never thought about modifing PGP
to generate that large of a key. When I finish it I'll post the
source here. I'm sure someone here would like to at least have
the option.
Thank you for the input.
Return to December 1995
Return to “Derek Atkins <warlord@ATHENA.MIT.EDU>”