(Part 3) Top products from r/BitcoinAll
We found 28 product mentions on r/BitcoinAll. We ranked the 71 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 41-60. You can also go back to the previous section.
42. Ethereum: Blockchains, Digital Assets, Smart Contracts, Decentralized Autonomous Organizations
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
43. The Internet of Money: A collection of talks by Andreas M. Antonopoulos
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
The Internet of Money A Collection of Talks by Andreas M Antonopoulos
44. The Art of War -- Spirituality for Conflict: Annotated & Explained
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
45. Perfect Passwords: Selection, Protection, Authentication
Sentiment score: 2
Number of reviews: 1
46. Winternals Defragmentation, Recovery, and Administration Field Guide
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
Used Book in Good Condition
47. Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
Sapiens A Brief History of Humankind
48. Bohr-Jessen Limit Theorem, Revisited (MSJ Memoirs)
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
49. C2G Replacement Power Cable For Computers, TVs, Monitors, & More - 10' Black Universal Cord Works With Any 3 Pin AC Power Connection - 18 Gauge Wire (03134)
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
Replaces lost or worn-out power cords. Universal design works with your PC, monitor, TV, printer, or other devices with a 3 pin power connection.Use this versatile 10ft power cable to reach your gear & deliver safe, reliable power. Perfect for TVs, computers, and other gadgets.Compatible with any de...
50. Tripp Lite 10 Outlet Surge Protector Power Strip, 8ft Cord, Tel/DSL Protection, RJ11, & Dollar 150,000 Insurance (TLP1008TEL)
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
Protect any electronic device from power surges & spikes: Surge protector with two outlets protects your pc, personal computer, laptop, printer, scanner, router, phone, fax, modem, television, lamp or any other home/office electronics from dangerous power surges, spikes & line noisePowerful AC surge...
51. TP-Link 5 Port 10/100 Mbps Fast Ethernet Switch | Desktop Ethernet Splitter | Ethernet Hub | Plug & Play | Fanless Quiet | Desktop Design | Green Technology | Unmanaged (TL-SF1005D),White
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
PLUG-AND-PLAY - Easy setup with no configuration or no software neededETHERNET SPLITTER Connectivity to your router or modem router for additional wired connections (laptop, gaming console, printer, etc.)5 Port FAST ETHERNET - 5 10/100 Mbps Gigabit auto-negotiation RJ45 ports greatly expand network ...
52. CyberPower PDU30BHVT8R Basic PDU, 208-230V/30A, 8 Outlets, 1U Rackmount
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
208V - 230V 50Hz/60Hz 30A BASIC Power Distribution Unit8 OUTLETS: (6) IEC-320 C13 (2) IEC-320 C19INPUT: Network-grade NEMA L6-30P (twist lock) plug with 10 foot power cord1U RACK MOUNT - Rugged industrial-grade metal housing, cord retention tray, horizontal and vertical mounting bracketsLIMITED LIFE...
53. ARCTIC Breeze Mobile - Mini USB Desktop Fan with Flexible Neck, Portable Desk Fan for Home, Office, Silent USB Fan, Fan Speed: 1700 RPM - White
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
EXTREMELY EFFICIENT: The Breeze Mobile has 92 mm fan blades and thus ensures reliable cooling and refreshment on hot summer days. Excellent cooling performance also on-the-goVIRTUALLY SILENT: As the fan and the motor are adapted from ARCTIC's successful case, it works in total silence and offers an ...
54. Crucial 8GB Single DDR3/DDR3L 1600 MT/S (PC3-12800) Unbuffered SODIMM 204-Pin Memory - CT102464BF160B
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
Increases system performanceEasy to install; Micron quality a higher level of reliabilityPremium quality memory from a trusted brandLaptop/Notebook dual voltage 135V/15V memoryX4Gb based part uses newer technology
55. PCI-Express PCIE 8 Pin to Dual 8 (6+2) Pin Video Card Y-Splitter Adapter Power Supply Cable
Sentiment score: 2
Number of reviews: 1
Cable has One Male and Spliters into Two FemaleSplits the 8-Pin PCI-Express connector from the power supply into two
56. EVGA 430 W1, 80+ WHITE 430W, 3 Year Warranty, Power Supply 100-W1-0430-KR, Black
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
EVGA 430W - "Unbeatable Value"80 PLUS certified, with up to 80% efficiency under typical loadsFan Size / Bearing: 120mm Sleeve Bearingunparalleled EVGA Customer SupportHeavy-duty protections including UVP (Under Voltage Protection), OPP (Over Power Protection), and SCP (Short Circuit Protection)
57. EVGA 100-W1-0500-KR 500 W1, 80+ White 500W, 3 Year Warranty, Power Supply, Black
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
EVGA 500 Watt; Unbeatable value80 plus white certified, with 80 percentage efficiency or higher under typical loadsHeavy duty protections, including OVP (Over voltage protection); UVP (Under voltage protection, OCP (Over current protection), OPP (over power protection), and SCP (short circuit protec...
58. TP-Link AV600 Powerline WiFi Extender - Powerline Adapter with WiFi, WiFi Booster, Plug & Play, Power Saving, Ethernet over Power, Expand both Wired and WiFi Connections (TL-WPA4220 KIT)
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
WiFi powerline adapter provides up to 600Mbps Ethernet over power, up to 300Mbps WiFi. Ideal to be Ethernet extender who can easily go over the wallsAs network adapters supporting HomePlug AV, easy to add multiple adapters and works under 110-240VPower saving automatically reduces power consumption ...
59. NF2 5 Gh/s Nano Fury 2 Dual Chip USB Miner Bitfury NFY2 asic-Miner
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
The New NF2 miner contains TWO Bitfury (Rev.1) ASIC ChipsSturdy construction includes Black heat sink on the back, to Disperse Heat.Super Easy Install - No additional drivers needed! Bfgminer & Cgminer support!Speed per bits: 50 bits – 3.7-4.1 Gh/s, 53-55 bits – 4.7-5.4 Gh/s.!!5Gh/s In one USB m...
60. SanDisk Ultra Fit 16GB USB 3.0 Flash Drive SDCZ43-016G-G46
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
High-speed USB 3.0 in a small, ultra-low-profile flash driveStay-put storage for notebooks, game consoles, in-car audio and moreRecover lost or corrupted files with a year's subscription to SanDisk RescuePRO
Author: fbonomi
Content:
>TLDR: Evidence that Dave Kleiman (the dead partner of Wright) was also a Windows programmer with a very strong background on security.
>He developed a product (called S-Lok) distributed by S-Doc as a security tool (a sort of hardening tool-kit)
>At S-Doc, cryptography was heavily used to develop several products, broadly aimed at reliable and verifiable transmission of data and messages, centred around the idea of a an "unalterable, encrypted audit log system".
>I think this paints Kleiman as a very plausible author of the first Bitcoin software
>When the news that Craig Wright could have been Satoshi emerged, I purchased his book “ The IT Regulatory and Standards Compliance Handbook †in order to search for clues that he was Satoshi.
>I was disappointed. The book is published in 2008; more precisely, it says “this week†referring to February 2008 (p. 644), terefore when Satoshi would have been fully working on Bitcoin.
>There book deals with other subjects, but there are several occasions where something bitcoin-like could have emerged. For example, all mentions to cryptography are rather vague (ok, the book’s subject does not require a LOT of crypto, but nevertheless...). Digital signatures are treated (they are generally called “electronic signaturesâ€), but again nothing that echoes concepts that would return in Bitcoin.
>So, no proof that he was NOT Satoshi, but no evidence that he had similar interests in that period, either.
>I then started giving a look at the books authored by Dave Kleiman. There are a few, generally dealing with Windows security including one co-authored (among others) with Craig Wright .
>Then I stumbled on his book “ Winternals Defragmentation, Recovery, and Administration Field Guide â€
There is an interesting bio of Kleiman in that Amazon page, listing his titles, and containing:
>He has developed a Windows Operating System lockdown tool, S-Lok ( www.s-doc.com/products/slok.asp ), which surpasses NSA, NIST, and Microsoft Common Criteria Guidelines.
>So, we now know that Kleiman was a security expert, was good at Windows security, and had written software for Windows.
>The web site for the company seems down, but archive.org helps here:
> https://web.archive.org/web/20080828130153/http://www.s-doc.com/products/slok.asp
>This is a mirror of the page about the program written By Kleiman on the company’s site, taken in the months he was probably working on Bitcoin.
>The software is described thus:
>The S-LokTM system is a Comprehensive System Hardening Solution that dramatically enhances your OS security by appropriately altering your system registry, security database and file system ACL's.
>(from its technical brochure )
>Nothing too exciting here. A software related to security, but a quite boring one.
>It gets more interesting when you start looking at the line of products that were being developed at s-Doc. This page lists a few PDFs about them: https://web.archive.org/web/20081121211338/http://www.s-doc.com/technical/technical.asp
>mirrored in https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0Bwr9mVDA8j3LU3ozYm9uOVpuSjA&usp=drive_web
>Basically, it was a suite of products allowing cryptographically secure distribution of data and messages:
>S-docâ„¢ develops products that solve the most urgent business problems of the Information Age. They protect sensitive information during transport over an open network and when at rest during server storage
>It’s nothing specifically bitcoin-like, but yet it’s an environment heavily imbued with cryptography:
>The encryption algorithm (Triple DES, Skipjack or Rijndael/AES at a key length of 168, 96 and 128 bits, respectively), chosen at the time of system installation, is seeded by SITT using an RNG (Random Number Generator). Either a standard hardware white-noise generator or FIPS 186-2 approved pseudo-algorithm generates the unique encryption key for each and every transaction.
>The core of the system seems to have been “an unalterable, encrypted audit log systemâ€.
>S-doc solutions include an unalterable, encrypted audit log system. All transaction activity and user access is available to authorized administrators, originators and compliance officers without exposing the underlying information.
>(reminding of zero-knowledge proof)
>What I also found interesting is the document about S-Doc's applications in finance and insurance:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4YULdyuY7PvR1JjdVhxNFAwdWs/view?pref=2&pli=1
>Once again emphasis is placed on the “unalterable, encrypted audit log system†log.
>In conclusion: There is of course no direct evidence of Bitcoin in the material, but it can be seen that S-Doc was a place where creative uses of cryptography were usual.
>Also, concepts like “unalterable, encrypted audit log system†were common knowledge at S-Doc.
>Dave Kleiman was an accomplished Windows programmer, with exactly the technical capabilities and the cultural history one would expect from the author of the Bitcoin software
>I think he is by far the best candidate for this title.
>Thanks, Dave
Here is the post for archival purposes:
Author: Jballerz
Content:
> https://www.amazon.com/C2G-Cables-03134-Universal-IEC320C13/dp/B00005113L/ref=cm_cr_arp_d_product_top?ie=UTF8
>Bitmain makes it clear your power cord needs to be 220-240v or else the power supply will not be able to deliver 1600w. I don't see a voltage anywhere in the information, will this power cord work with my APW3++ for powering a T9/S9? Thanks!