Joseph S D Yao wrote:
On Fri, Aug 11, 2006 at 09:31:52PM -0500, Laurence F. Sheldon, Jr. wrote:
Joseph S D Yao wrote:
Do modern laptops have disk drives that are that hard to remove? Let us say "No, they are not that hard to remove."
Now what? (Recall that this thread started with a situation where it was said that carry-on was limited to passport, medicine in small quantities, and precious little else.)
No, you were right about my intent. If you're flying from the States you can carry this. Flying in the reverse direction is the problem - this week. (The rules already changed, today; are we sure that disk drives are still on the Index Proscriptus? What about RAM drives?)
You could also rush-express it ahead of you, but that's a bit of a gamble. Less so if you encrypt it and keep a copy at home. Sort of like faxing your disk drive ahead.
And, going along with what I think you later said, if you just leave the laptop itself at home and stick the disk drive into an identical laptop provided for that purpose at the destination, you could never tell the difference.
The fact of the matter is laptops get lost. Any business that depends on information being carried around on laptops by employees of the corporation needs to be prepared for that inevitability, and take steps to insure that data is not compromised. I have had three laptops stolen in the last five years, I feel this threat acutely, but it doesn't change the fact that I have to carry a laptop in order to fulfill my duties. Fundamentally I don't see how changes in airline policy would have a significant effect in the steps required to secure a laptop against theft or tampering. joelja
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Joel Jaeggli Unix Consulting joelja@uoregon.edu GPG Key Fingerprint: 5C6E 0104 BAF0 40B0 5BD3 C38B F000 35AB B67F 56B2