yon Leveron blog

John's musings on the Interknot cowpath

Archive for February, 2010

back from the sick, the lame, and the lazy . . .

Posted by John on 28th February 2010

OK, severe bronchitis was not kind to me at all.  This is still alive, I just had other issues to attend to.  Ahem.

In that vein, I bring you The Specials.

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Now playing: The Specials – Enjoy Yourself
via FoxyTunes

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Ramdisks live on – performance in Win7

Posted by John on 4th February 2010

Good bits, highly recommended !  A 10g ramdisk did wonder for my transcoding, since it was i/o bound from Raid 5, under Win7 x64.

http://memory.dataram.com/products-and-services/software/ramdisk “From DataRam”


Ramdisk Screenshot
  • Speed up Internet page load times
  • Control what files and programs are stored into memory (loaded at boot time)
  • Create temporary disks for added security
  • Speed up disk-to-disk activities such as video encryption and audio ripping
  • Accelerate databases
  • Reduce compile times

RAMDisk features:

  • Freeware version (up to 4 GB disk size). Please register with Dataram for larger disks (there is no charge).
  • Universal version for WindowsXP/2000, Vista (32 and 64-bit) Home Basic, Home Premium, Business and Ultimate, Windows Server 2003 Standard, Web and Enterprise Edition
  • Up to 32 GB disk in Vista and Windows 2003, 2008 Server (registered mode)
  • Save and load features allow RAMDisk to appear as persistent storage even through reboots
  • Supports Windows 7

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Now playing: Queen – Bohemian Rhapsody
via FoxyTunes

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some new intel 32nm chips to support hardware AES acceleration

Posted by John on 3rd February 2010

(this next bit can affect everything from certain web transactions, to VoIP, to full disk encryption . . .)

AES-NI Performance Analyzed; Limited To 32nm Core i5 CPUs

2:00 AM – 02/02/2010 by Patrick Schmid and Achim Roos

Security is an important topic these days. However, it’s typically only recognized as important by professionals. If security were to suddenly turn into a mainstream selling point, though, then perhaps it’d make more sense for companies like Intel to promote it.

The Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) has already been adopted by the United States government—including the NSA—along with many other institutions. Intel’s 32nm Clarkdale-based CPUs (only the Core i5-600-series, so far) now promise significant performance benefits for AES encryption and decryption via new instructions. Today we’re looking at the real-world benefits of Intel’s AES-NI functionality, comparing a dual-core Core i5-661 with AES New Instructions (AES-NI) to a quad-core Core i7-870, which lacks the new encryption acceleration capability.

Encryption is used much more intensively than you might suspect. Consider Internet sites that hold you sensitive personal information, or utilize sensitive data for transactions. They all use protocols like Transport Layer Security (TLS) or Secure Sockets Layer (SSL). VoIP, instant messaging, and email may also be protected with these protocols. Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) and electronic payments are other popular encryption applications.

However, TLS and SSL are cryptographic protocols for secure communication, while AES is a general-purpose encryption standard. It can be used to encrypt individual files, data containers, archive files, entire drives (including thumb drives), and even multi-drive volumes. AES can be implemented in software, and there are products based on hardware acceleration as well, since encryption/decryption represent a rather significant workload. Solutions like TrueCrypt or Microsoft’s BitLocker, which is part of Windows Vista and Windows 7 Ultimate, are capable of encrypting entire partitions on the fly.

(for the rest of the first page, and all the other pages, hit up Tom’s)

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Now playing: Men At Work – Crazy
via FoxyTunes

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How to run your own SFTP server under Windows

Posted by John on 2nd February 2010

Credit : Nicholas Fong,  who also has many other helpful articles at his site.

For the latest version of his accumulated guide / information, please see the authentic SFTP server under Cygwin article at http://pigtail.net/LRP/printsrv/cygwin-sshd.html ) ;)

It worked fine for me in Windows 7 on the first shot.  While I’d already been using Cygwin, the instructions were clear, though I did follow the Vista section at step 5.  The version I used was dated November 18, 2009.

Good luck!

cygwin


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Now playing: Disturbed – Down With The Sickness
via FoxyTunes

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