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The Origami Workstation
Shawn Blanc covers the Origami Workstation on his site, The Sweet Setup:>…the iPad keyboard I prefer most is the Origami Workstation. There are a few reasons:*It’s separate from the iPad, thus not in the way when I’m not using the iPad with a keyboard (which is most of the time for me). *It holds the iPad similar to how a folio or keyboard case would. *It works with Apple’s own bluetooth keyboard, which is an excellent keyboard. I always keep the Apple wireless keyboard in the Origami in my backpack since I got it a few years ago. It’s great to be able to use the same keyboard at home, on my desk at the office or anywhere I travel. Making sure the keyboard stays powered off in my bag is harder than you’d think and the velcro is pretty worn out, but when it goes I’ll replace it with another one just like it.
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Relevant to my interests...
This makes Usenet very useful for sharing information about recent happenings, for social discussions, and especially for receiving assistance about problems, such as resolving technical glitches or getting help with a diet program.
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I Stand Corrected..Producing In Paper Can Be A Good Idea
If there’s a hero in the Edward Snowden story, it’s Ladar Levinson. >In an interesting work-around, Levison complied the next day by turning over the private SSL keys as an 11 page printout in 4-point type. The government, not unreasonably, called the printout “illegible.”
“To make use of these keys, the FBI would have to manually input all 2,560 characters, and one incorrect keystroke in this laborious process would render the FBI collection system incapable of collecting decrypted data,” prosecutors wrote. More over at Wired..
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Consider Using GPG
It had been a long time since I’d used GPG on the Mac. At some point I updated the OS before the mail add-ons were compatible and getting everything set up was kind of a pain in the ass.
It’s come a long way, as you can see from their short screencast. It really is as simple as it looks.
In a few minutes you can be up and running, even if you don’t know much about how public key encryption works. If you’re interested in controlling your own privacy in the content of your communications? Use GPG.
Here’s my public key for jurist {at} bitninja {dot} org. You can use this to verify the authenticity of things that I publish and sign as well as sending me encrypted communications.
—–BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK—– Version: GnuPG/MacGPG2 v2.0.20 (Darwin) Comment: GPG
mQENBFIgAEkBCADHb0jQKG/111G0C4Z/o2y0XUJR/6BIHq8GLsTGiO8+VIVM25f8 DiB3M0ZyzZqaGaFAOfSUWdcj0MAcpOSGd3it3gLMV6ALP0lSNWBJTmYN6pHSoukb Ts77Mp+EZadQI+yLG0WoipQU/rroSq1KeB6sNcWGIUIG7S3IETT6LPWLYS5v0Bok kaB/eazxhoV3cDP75UzHtZ4+zz7yu/uvYu+cDO+YqJ4YxXz1cjv+G1oHXYwtnqHi maFen9UXF4HOsPMFOKtiQPzd3cGBPpXBJfdsRL//D2t7bLBrADe8WVPSr5O+kl0k S0pHBkEcN5Yxq9NrxgF1zmPxjdXcwbFgNWyJABEBAAG0HGp1cjFzdCA8anVyMXN0 QGJpdG5pbmphLm9yZz6JAT0EEwEKACcFAlIgAEkCGy8FCQeGH4AFCwkIBwMFFQoJ CAsFFgIDAQACHgECF4AACgkQI9CuKvN5brVX3Qf+Og7RGsiorbxoERtm1/F95cu6 UGb4CN9r8uXV8TJO2G71PAZqsh16zp5zTMhiNRKjCboI0FEZ43OiZS7WOi5Krc6C v/ZgIq7L1SsCXN2OcwqyfCf3tNnW4e4leBq8nT7iAlsMi48rCXemKUKU98oG+NBb OR6SzCqt6gbuUdkt+EanszXipL9ZZbTdza9yxgh7xAo2iwb6NMSSLHJMaP2OXPk3 kX7TH/1qmyLgzzjEQQObCOxYqZrCwm2P7tzahE7Gy+2Nztf+M0DAA9fOO3FJ1dQR eQ8s0cayWHajw+ieJsU6RomRYGkdb0pWG2pnvEk5jEJKnCHLrvh5xsFhj3bPlLkB DQRSIABJAQgA42IOZ9+leC6rvvhkVw4nhTUGJG+6qD4DIjbqEp9uWKmWVpl0yfND MVPeRJ6UPxvGiBx417kZrRdCkI7nXrgoRVrZd0WEQgs+hVCTMKw/K2t7vEaM+F79 IbDouhGYzbImLGg/jZcJJpq9dqNbI16hi60u2jZGijm3SY/bO2/rvA/QcgdEWe7i 7Fm+e7Ch+aKXdlCIUorDDwm4ds7akhaKmnhWIwhukof99Ou0u5ks//mscieqBTdU LVBru1/g7jazhViDzZv+P5XuHAMQWJgcb5U7KeWAYMfGRV28/kReZw0yVbJepVPO jWcpSIN8sT2UdXx9AMAMeZ/YA/IhMEbQPQARAQABiQJEBBgBCgAPBQJSIABJAhsu BQkHhh+AASkJECPQrirzeW61wF0gBBkBCgAGBQJSIABJAAoJEImXYIsoH+cgJfsI AIORqSCyu6U361TA0q+DHbQh0oOgd0+Sxbgg5OxqrKh398m6khhTPRSFU4SP5AY2 /QQMZWNCJgGOdi/+a+4S3T5QKYYgL/nrorIwIENLfhFXn0laCwswBcUC+gdt4iTq 6Hz2OecQj1QJQKnNV83vaOSYPTteoKsna5Bq3aB324PMB+2NLQrg4L9vaArT3KZf 3um5Dqipqs8yjP39djeq/Chpf2PvqAsA9m0W2sr0bPVFQeqLYFHIz082p9ZO/MB5 nDWpoX5+dsBdT5U99W1A9lmW7GpXJFe1KYQ/4j6TOKN65zp5nWpuHbWjdEt3oBW1 AGnV12/aD0pFs6baIwdTK+NkswgAtQybUh6bCDUt7idY2wucxAHrmze9Lls7dC/K UC5PGf2GBUBaK+wH9+5VK+6HHyx5Yv8kKzdPvtbg/kn6db5VNSuIZz8JsNJMTrn8 hB/bLlSdpdLWy4gV8PNKDSZZGx5neyyrXJ4rLu3wsB2u4Fe9atntqquTnYUIZ9e0 pQMS6x+bLdCSSDXZcs710pP3nvZ/9AQusKu8iO8Zy6xNEhN+iZqnkjtLNKiSMrBu U9DXtKlO5DQKO2RKqSQFamWZJquIhAUo7KYrsgVVjtZ3928dpLczpIxmRzEDi1yU zWIprPiv/9Ph4tswh9lx988LuZvYpDPDGEXeFBp3IQzxM9aKzg== =8f86 —–END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK—–
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iOS 7
It sure sounds like there’s a lot to come in the new version of iOS. The visual design is as polarizing as was rumored and I certainly have some mixed feelings about but there’s one app that really stands out as being incredible. The compass. There may be some rough edges in some other apps, but I’m pretty sure this one has achieved perfection.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600.0"] ![ Screenshot via iLounge ](http://static1.squarespace.com/static/5044c76484ae39da43a84961/5044c8a884ae39da43a84c40/51bc910ce4b04f4d63b46c07/1371312396748/1.jpg) Screenshot via iLounge [/caption]
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