Generating random numbers
Mike Johnson
exabyte!smtplink!mikej at uunet.UU.NET
Thu Oct 14 17:42:03 PDT 1993
If you have an audio input to your computer, try recording noise from a fan,
traffic on a busy street, or the roar of a crowd at a football game. Then
compress the output to remove any obvious redundancies such as 60 Hz hum from
a fan motor or unused dynamic range of the input digitizer. This results in
much better "randomness" than some keystroke timing techniques.
Of course, writing cryptographic software would be a whole lot easier if all
computers had a built in real random number generating device that could
produce quantum physics related data as fast as you could read it. Anyone
want to build a serial or parallel port attachment that could be read by
any software needing random numbers for crypto or other applications?
Mike Johnson
mpjohnso at nyx.cs.du.edu
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