Lava lamp randomness.Sealed within a transparent, tapered ta·per n. 1. A small or very slender candle. 2. A long wax-coated wick used to light candles or gas lamps. 3. A source of feeble light. 4. a. , liquid-filled cylinder, illuminated colored globs slowly rise and fall. Meandering and deforming, their shapes and paths change unpredictably. Invented in 1963, a decorative fixture-in many homes during the 1970s, and still in production, Lava Lite lamps are now the object of renewed curiosity Indeed, researchers have come up with a novel application of the mesmerizing mes·mer·ize tr.v. mes·mer·ized, mes·mer·iz·ing, mes·mer·iz·es 1. To spellbind; enthrall: "He could mesmerize an audience by the sheer force of his presence" movements of the lamp's globules. They use them as the starting point Noun 1. starting point - earliest limiting point terminus a quo commencement, get-go, offset, outset, showtime, starting time, beginning, start, kickoff, first - the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the for generating a sequence of random numbers. Called lavarand, the new random-number generator is the work of Robert G. Mende Jr., Landon Curt Noll Landon Curt Noll (born 1960) [1] [2] is the discoverer of two Mersenne primes, which he found while still enrolled in high school and concurrently at Cal State Hayward [3]. , and Sanjeev Sisodiya of Silicon Graphics in Mountain View, Calif. Random numbers are an immensely valuable commodity, not only for the operation of computer-based, slot machines but also for computer simulations and for generating the secret strings of digits required to encode (1) To assign a code to represent data, such as a parts code. Contrast with decode. (2) To convert from one format or signal to another. See codec and D/A converter. (3) The term is sometimes erroneously used for "encrypt. and decode (1) To convert coded data back into its original form. Contrast with encode. (2) Same as decrypt. See cryptography. (cryptography) decode - To apply decryption. sensitive information in cryptographic systems (SN: 11/9/91, p. 300). The trouble is that no numerical recipe used by a computer produces truly random numbers. The computer simply follows a set procedure, and restarting the process with the same initial number, or seed value, produces exactly the same sequence of digits. One way to do better is to vary the seed value randomly. Noll and his colleagues decided that the unpredictably wandering globs in a Lava Lite lamp, operated according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the manufacturer's instructions, are a more convenient source of randomness than, say, the sporadic decays of a radioactive element. "While any good chaotic source could be used, we favor Lava Lite lamps in part because they were the source of inspiration for lavarand and in part because they are cool," the researchers admit. A digital camera, periodically photographs a set of six Lava Lite lamps, each one generally in a different stage of activity. The camera adds its own electronic noise to the data, and the resulting image is converted into a string of Is and 0s. That string is then mathematically manipulated according to a scheme known as the National Institute of Standards and Technology's Secure Hash Algorithm (algorithm, cryptography) Secure Hash Algorithm - (SHA) A one-way hash function developped by NIST and defined in standard FIPS 180. SHA-1 is a revision published in 1994; it is also described in ANSI standard X9.30 (part 2). , which compresses and scrambles the 921,600 bytes of the original image into a 140-byte packet of digits. This packet then serves as the seed value for a computer-based random-number generator. Each such value starts a chain of mathematical operations that produces a different string of apparently random digits. Silicon Graphics has applied for a patent on the lavarand method of generating random numbers. |
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