From: Ryan Lackey <rdl@mit.edu>
To: Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com>
Message Hash: c035c7590f15ef6c467da6c8b544e6a811a590a140110c74d86c73ce78880926
Message ID: <tw7hg66vf0p.fsf@the-great-machine.mit.edu>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1998-02-11 06:26:18 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 11 Feb 1998 14:26:18 +0800
From: Ryan Lackey <rdl@mit.edu>
Date: Wed, 11 Feb 1998 14:26:18 +0800
To: Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com>
Subject: Re: TEMPEST open-source definition version 0.1alpha (fwd)
Message-ID: <tw7hg66vf0p.fsf@the-great-machine.mit.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
> confusing TEMPEST with NEMA
No, I am certain they're TEMPEST cases; they're government security vendors,
with names that include the word TEMPEST or Security or whatever, and their
prices are huge. And when I said "I'd like to pay COD", they said "we only
accept government purchase forms." I have a plain NEMA 19" rack with power
and fans, it's quite different.
Black Unicorn's post about the demise of cash is particularly true when dealing
with vendors who want government POs :)
The people at hacking cons who are selling TEMPEST cases are selling what
I believe are the real thing acquired through a variety of methods, some
legal, others perhaps not. Usually they contain crufty old PCs, but one
guy had some really nice fully-enclosed TEMPEST-compliant racks. They had
serious power filters at the bottom, massive fans, and shielded fan i/o.
They were basically free (a few hundred dollars), but I couldn't motor freight
them from the location to my home, since I didn't have anything but cash at
the time.
ObNonCrypto: Waiting until 10 days before fc98 to buy airline tickets when
the cheap fare expired an hour ago was SO SO SO stupid. Like taking 4 c-notes
and lighting them on fire. Oh well.
--
Ryan Lackey
rdl@mit.edu
http://mit.edu/rdl/
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