Difference between revisions of "Derek's wiki test space"

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|To our knowledge, the
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To our knowledge, the
 
provable security property is often taught as being self evident
 
provable security property is often taught as being self evident
 
and is not questioned on any level (recent advances in quantum
 
and is not questioned on any level (recent advances in quantum
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in an application. One main purpose of this paper is to correct
 
in an application. One main purpose of this paper is to correct
 
such a misconception and to demonstrate how the imperfect
 
such a misconception and to demonstrate how the imperfect
generated key affects the security proofs themselves.|
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generated key affects the security proofs themselves.
  
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Revision as of 21:07, 30 May 2019

Test space

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Comment box

style="width:33.3%;"Tip"
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To our knowledge, the provable security property is often taught as being self evident and is not questioned on any level (recent advances in quantum hacking may be an exception; however, such attacks are based on discrepancies between the model and real systems as opposed to the security of the model itself). The commonly cited reason for no-cloning or quantum entanglement is very far from sufficient. Even in the technical literature, a key is often regarded as perfect whenever it is used in an application. One main purpose of this paper is to correct such a misconception and to demonstrate how the imperfect generated key affects the security proofs themselves.

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__MATHJAX_NODOLLAR__ I owe you 20.

I owe you $20



I owe you $20

Infoboxtest

Infobox testing
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OK this is the test bed for the u-beaut infobox. What a pain to install. For the record, I followed the info at this link: http://www.etcwiki.org/wiki/Mediawiki_template_guide

Why the heck why isn't this a file you can just unpackage into a directory rather than having to manually create 20 files, I don't know.

I owe you $20

More Testing

  • [math]\int_a^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy[/math]
  • [math]\int_b^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy,{\rm does~it~work?}[/math]
  • [math]\int_b^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy,{\rm not~quite,~as~referencing~is~cactus.}[/math]
  • [math]\int_b^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy,cactii eradicated[/math]


According to scientists, the Sun is pretty big.[1] The Moon, however, is not so big.[2]

Green-rectangle.gif


MathJax Test

Here is an inline equation: \( x^2 \)

Here is a display equation: \begin{align} \int 2x \; dx &= x^2 + C \tag{1}\label{eqn:integral} \end{align}

That last equation was Eqn. \ref{eqn:integral}.

\( \int_a^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy , \)

and in display form

\[ \int_a^y f(\alpha\,)\,dy . \]

Scratch

Therefore, the minimal cost = $50 million [math]\times[/math] 360 = $18,000 million = $18 billion. The maximal cost is = $50 million [math]\times[/math] 20,300 = $1,016,500 million = $1 trillion (approx).

Scratch pad downloads

Presentations

Notes relating to Test space

  1. E. Miller, The Sun, (New York: Academic Press, 2005), 23-5.
  2. R. Smith, "Size of the Moon", Scientific American, 46 (April 1978): 44-6.