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Technology Stocks : Novell (NOVL) dirt cheap, good buy? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DJBEINO who wrote (28239)9/24/1999 3:01:00 AM
From: Scott C. Lemon  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 42771
 
Hello DJBEINO,

This is a long awaited announcement! Congrats to Dave and Peter (and the rest of the team) for pulling this off and getting out!

> The Internet Messaging System, which debuted at Novell's BrainShare
> user conference in March, runs on NDS and IP-based NetWare, an
> Internet version of its flagship network operating system.

This is an intense product that is well written by a great team of people. The team that did this knows what NetWare is all about!

Cool to see it hit the 'net ...

Scott C. Lemon



To: DJBEINO who wrote (28239)9/24/1999 8:47:00 AM
From: ToySoldier  Respond to of 42771
 
Article about smart cards - They mention that the card will be used to login to the Novell NetWare network...

Pentagon gets 'smart'
Military smart cards will access nets, encrypt
data.


By ELLEN MESSMER
Network World, 09/20/99

WASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S.
military says it will phase out
plastic identification cards in favor of a chip-based
multi-application smart card that about 800,000
personnel will carry.

The Defense Department smart card will hold digital
certificates that will allow the holder to sign and
encrypt documents or purchase orders, and will be
the means to access networks managed by the Army,
Navy, Air Force and Marines.

This smart card ID will also eventually be the key
used to physically enter restricted buildings.

Corporations are bound to follow the Defense
Depart-ment's smart card lead, particularly
contractors that share access to government
networks. Civilian employees working for the military
may soon begin using the smart cards, too.

For three years, the U.S. military has conducted
operational testing of smart cards for network access,
as well as for storing medical information and for use
as digital cash. Now the Pentagon, which sets
technical strategy for the armed forces, is aiming to
achieve what is probably the largest smart card rollout
in history. The Defense Department considers the
rollout an important part of its commitment to fully
adopt electronic commerce.

Desktops will need a card reader into which users will
insert their smart cards, which will contain digital
certificates and applications such as Novell NetWare
log-on scripts.


While the cards provide an extra measure of security
and portability, passwords will still be necessary to
use the digital certificates. Those certificates also let
the user digitally "sign" or encrypt applications. In
addition, the Pentagon wants this smart card to be so
intelligent that it can let its holder into a restricted
building. The General Services Administration has
been given the task of defining a government standard
for the card.

"We want the smart card ID card to also support
building access," says Marv Langston, deputy
assistant secretary of defense. "This one common
card will also be for standard access to the network."

One factor driving the conversion from plastic IDs to
crypto-based smart cards is the fact that the Internet
has made it easy to get fake military IDs. "We cannot
trust the ID card anymore," says Rob Brandewie,
deputy director of the Defense Manpower Data
Center West in Monterey, Calif., which maintains an
Oracle database, servers and mainframes to keep
track of more than 250,000 personnel changes every
day.

The formidable job of converting from plastic IDs to
smart cards - expected to be formally announced this
week by the Defense Department's top gun on
technology issues, Deputy Secretary of Defense John
Hamre - has already quietly begun.

The Defense Manpower Data Center provides
remote access to the proprietary client-based
Real-Time Automated Personnel ID System
(RAPIDS), which each year churns out three million
plastic ID cards, which double as passports for
soldiers. RAPIDS interfaces with the Defense
Enrollment Eligibility Reporting Systems (DEERS), a
database that tracks 13 million current and retired
personnel globally in terms of their location and
benefits eligibility.

Brandewie says his data center has demonstrated it
can take the information from existing systems and use
it to issue smart card IDs instead of the plastic ones.
The DEERS database is also being used to store each
military employee's fingerprint as a 500-byte
compressed image.

This fingerprint will go on the smart card ID as the
biometric for fingerprint-based authentication in the
future. The idea is that no one will get a digital
certificate for their smart card until they can prove
their identity by passing a network-based ID check
based on fingerprint biometrics.

The smart card - whether from GemPlus,
Schlumberger or other vendors - has become a
commodity, says Martha Neal, deputy director of the
Defense Department's smart card technology office.

"They're $3 apiece now, down from $5 a year ago,"
Neal says, adding that storing multiple applications on
the cards is the way to hold down costs.

The Defense Department will now establish what it
calls the Configuration Management Control Board,
which will define the smart card's memory and
application specification and a Web-based certificate
authority - a huge technical challenge.

Public-key infrastructure products from Netscape,
called iPlanet, are licensed to the Defense Department
and will be tested at the Defense Manpower Data
Center next month for issuing digital certificates on
smart cards.

There is an expectation that smart card IDs that can
store a soldier's military records will reduce the
paperwork load because networked applications will
be able to upload the soldier's ID and download new
information related to training or credentials.

Col. Greg Miller, who works at the Air Expeditionary
Force Battle Lab at Mountain Home Air Force base
in Idaho, hopes "the hand-carried smart card will offer
the benefit of one-time data entry."

Barbara Straw, director of dispersing at the Naval
Systems Command Supply, assisted in a pilot project
on the USS Yorktown, which got ATM-like
machines to dispense digital cash directly into a
sailor's smart card in place of paper money. The
digital cash is used on board to buy items in the
closed world of the carrier at sea. Straw says she
would like to see a standardized "electronic cash
purse application" on the military smart card, too.