Well, my brain's pretty frazzled about now (and I still have a pretty dense paper on xFS to read and summarize for 9am tomorrow for my OS class) from all the press that's gone after me today. The ones I wrote down (I believe sameer wanted a list; I have names and numbers for some of these, too, bt it was pretty hectic: get off the phone, go to my terminal, note that I have 20 new mail messages from people wanting interviews or info, and answer the phone because it's ringing again.): NY Times WS Journal SF Chronicle CNN (camera crew) Marketplace (NPR) SF Examiner Kansas City Star Chronicle of Higher Education Boston Globe Newsweek (or WiReD; it was Steven Levy) and at least half a dozen more. Not to mention the job offers, one call that I couldn't decipher (it sounded like one of those AI's that you see roaming the net every so often, only on the phone), and email in French (je suis canadien, but I was still amazed I could understand it). Sorry for the blathering, but that's how I feel just now. BTW: the line we tended to stress was "public availability of source to at least the security bits", but who knows how it will come out? Holger.Reif@PrakInf.TU-Ilmenau.DE (Holger Reif ) was kind enough to verify that the SunOS 4.1.3 version of Netscape generates its keys in _exactly_ the same way as Solaris and HP-UX; he says he'll test other architectures tomorrow. I suspect any big-endian machine with the lrand48() function (which is used in key generation on Solaris/HP-UX; it's disguised in unssl.c as the macro mklcpr()) will be the same. Other Unix flavours should require only minor changes. I'm still interested in what Windoze clients do (other than lose). - Ian "So how _did_ Netscape's stock do today?"