I will not waste any more time or effort to reply to you. I will only feel as though I have to defend myself even further from someone who has not even bothered to produce any credentials as to his expertise in the matter other than personal attacks and hot air. I thought I had found an...
Dictionary.com says it's not.
And, from your link on 'Wikipedia' in which anyone can write stuff up :
In this meaning, the term cryptosystem is used as shorthand for "cryptographic system". A cryptographic system is any computer system that involves cryptography
Still, not a word. As I said...
'Cryptosytem' is not a word. So, you're right.
If you're saying it isn't a cryptographic system , then you're wrong.
cryp·tog·ra·phy
1.The process or skill of communicating in or deciphering secret writings or ciphers.
2.Secret writing.
There is no 'real world' cryptography that...
What about this?
Make up your own shorthand note taking system, then assign three digit number codes for every word you may likely need (that's 999 words). Every second use of the same word increments the number by a fourth/fifth digit. Third use next increment and so on. Unusual words could be...
This is a really a psych question.
5 minutes for the ship's drag coefficient to slow it down...
-because the ships Captain ordered "All Stop", so he can rush down
to save the apparently suicidal lady.
Thank you all. This is the best answer that fits the question I was trying to ask, but did not know how.
So the rules are different on the atomic scale. Interesting. It is the losses in the macroscopic world that I was trying to understand -why they don't apply to the atomic scale. The closer I...
This is closer to the answer that I was looking for. Thank you.
Take an atom of hydrogen, the electron spins around it forever as far as we know. Why can it do this? Shouldn't it slow down eventually? Or fly away? Will the proton always pull equally to keep it in place? If so, how? In any...
Ok, from the big bang, to the Stars, as radiation to the plants, eaten by animals that I just had for supper...no really.
Everything has electrons. Magnets are always surrounded by a field. Use the M field to induce current into a wire, now you have E and M fields. We can use electricity to...
If you are asking where does the energy of the fields come from in the first place...then you are on the right track.
No one will tell you.
Keep looking.
As shall I.