Re: [opensuse] Routing Root's Mail to Another User
On Mon, Oct 10, 2005 at 12:22:06AM +0200, eescar@free.fr wrote:
I beleive the login concept is completly un-natural to normal humans!
How many keys do you cary with you? A key is nothing more and nothing less then a physical login concept. Or the other way around, a key is nothing more or nothing less then a digital key.
I agree with you! What I mean is only that with current technology, we could have really "inteligent systems" for the masses about user identification, so that this discussion had never happened : a kind of autologin with permanent identification. I should have said : opening a session is ... (English isn't my natural language, I may miss-use some word ...) Regards, MaNU --
On Mon, Oct 10, 2005 at 02:15:50AM +0200, eescar@free.fr wrote:
On Mon, Oct 10, 2005 at 12:22:06AM +0200, eescar@free.fr wrote:
I beleive the login concept is completly un-natural to normal humans!
How many keys do you cary with you? A key is nothing more and nothing less then a physical login concept. Or the other way around, a key is nothing more or nothing less then a digital key.
I agree with you! What I mean is only that with current technology, we could have really "inteligent systems" for the masses about user identification, so that this discussion had never happened : a kind of autologin with permanent identification. I should have said : opening a session is ...
OK, I understand. he disadvatage is that this would require aditional hardware. Either a cardreader, usb key or RDIF thing nowadays. These all form a point of failure. Some examples, the reader is not supported under Linux, the card is demagnitized, the RDIF reader is broken, ... houghi -- Quote correct (NL) http://www.briachons.org/art/quote/ Zitiere richtig (DE) http://www.afaik.de/usenet/faq/zitieren Quote correctly (EN) http://www.netmeister.org/news/learn2quote.html
participants (2)
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eescar@free.fr
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houghi