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Jim choate ravage at bga.com
Wed Jun 22 11:13:23 PDT 1994


> 
> > An even better idea: disconnect the antenna. Most of the noise comes
> > from the front end amplifier, not the galactic and cosmic background,
> > at least in your average consumer grade receiver. And this is a quantum
> > process that someone else definitely can't predict or copy.
>
This is a bad idea, the computer it self will generate clocking noise which
will appear in the noise and destroy the randomness. The standard, and even
most high-end, recievers don't have the shielding to prevent this sort of
intrussion. Heck, that digital clock on your desk (and possibly your wrist if
close enough) will cause problems as well. 

> And if that doesn't work, crawl up the spectrum a bit.  The higher in 
> frequency you go, the more thermal noise you'll see.
>
Only up to a point. Past a certain point and the processes will start to
roll off their energy production. 







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