"der.hans" wrote: > > Am 28. Mar, 2002 schwätzte John (EBo) David so: > > > there was a scientific amirican artical about 10 years ago on building a > > chaos white noise random generator usinging a diode operated in it's > > unstable region and sampled... They got the thing to sit there and > > wonder all over the place. Appearently the dude that made it was able > > to get the built for just a couple of dollars at radio shack. You would > > likely be able to build it with an old junk radio or TV ;-) > > So why don't we have these for computers? Do they interfere with other > stuff? Does the rest of the computer interfere with them? Are they too slow > or not really random with today's computing capabilities and speeds? no one built one for a computer that I know of yet. Also, what most people are really interested in are not random numbers but psudo-random numbers that can actually be regenerated when needed given some key... Have you ever had to debug a program that had a stochastic element in it and from run to run there was no way to truely replicate a problem? -- been there, done that, added a comand line argument "seed" to the interface ;-) EBo --