spclagntdanazoe

@spclagntdanazoe@possumpat.io
0 Post – 11 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

Frequency hopping. It's like hiding messages in music. Always loved that idea.

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I tried but hated navigating with the mobile version of Google maps, so I'm splitting the difference and getting a CAT S22. Flip phone with Android go, hoping it's everything I need.

Dude for real!! 30 bucks and does everything I really want a smartwatch to do, without all the telemetry siphoning! Plus that "Terminal" watch face is chef's kiss. (https://zephyrlabs.github.io/Watchfaces/Terminal/)

How could I not choose this one??

Also they were updated to the version that didn't have that "all the posts in a sub suddenly show up and push what you were looking at down off your screen" bug

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This is awesome!

Plus they didn't put millions of dollars into marketing their product in the early 2000s to become a household name, yet are still heavyweights in the game. Always respected the hell out of them.

I was never happier than when I found Timeshift. https://itsfoss.com/backup-restore-linux-timeshift/

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Not android but I ended up going with a surface go 2 running pop os. It's a little tricky to get going but works great so far.

not OP, but my doc sends the 90-day scrip but the pharmacy will only fill 30 at a time. It's asinine.

So if you consider that different notes of music are different frequencies of sound, each radio frequency "hopped to" would be a different note on a piano being played on either end of the signal.

From Wikipedia: "Antheil and Lamarr developed the idea of using frequency hopping: in this case using a player piano roll to randomly change the signal sent between the control center and torpedo at short bursts within a range of 88 frequencies on the spectrum (88 black and white keys are on a piano keyboard). The specific code for the sequence of frequencies would be held identically by the controlling ship and in the torpedo. This basically encrypted the signal, as it was impossible for the enemy to scan and jam all 88 frequencies because this would have required too much power. Antheil would control the frequency-hopping sequence using a player-piano mechanism, which he had earlier used to score his Ballet Mécanique."

Maybe music in a language you're not fluent in?