I don't agree intent has any relevance here vs the other issues at hand, and it is news to me that there is some actual distinct expectation of privacy with regards to wavelength as you state. Visible and IR wavelengths…
> Yeah it's comical because Linux has so obviously driven a lot of people away from kernel development. I hear this "a lot" very often, but then it seems to be from people who have no real interest in technical work of…
That's quite a leap from "scan SSID" to knowing "all about your home network" and sounds like hyperbole. What can I gather from just passively scanning SSID and possibly putting out some probes on a properly configured…
Yes it is - that's what /SS is for.
Simplicity of what exactly? From the perspective of the device/hardware, SPI is much simpler. A UART based solution tends to be relatively much more complex on the hardware/device side. You can implement a basic…
I don't agree intent has any relevance here vs the other issues at hand, and it is news to me that there is some actual distinct expectation of privacy with regards to wavelength as you state. Visible and IR wavelengths…
> Yeah it's comical because Linux has so obviously driven a lot of people away from kernel development. I hear this "a lot" very often, but then it seems to be from people who have no real interest in technical work of…
That's quite a leap from "scan SSID" to knowing "all about your home network" and sounds like hyperbole. What can I gather from just passively scanning SSID and possibly putting out some probes on a properly configured…
Yes it is - that's what /SS is for.
Simplicity of what exactly? From the perspective of the device/hardware, SPI is much simpler. A UART based solution tends to be relatively much more complex on the hardware/device side. You can implement a basic…