GPG for windows
vedaal at hush.com
vedaal at hush.com
Sun Feb 27 05:10:09 CET 2005
>Message: 7
>Date: Fri, 25 Feb 2005 11:01:39 -0800
>From: Melissa Reese <mreese at calarts.edu>
>Subject: Re: GPG for windows
>To: gnupg-users at gnupg.org
>Message-ID: <562501.20050225110139 at calarts.edu>
>Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
[...]
>Over the years, I've kept an eye on WinPT as well, and while this
>one
>is open source, I've just never been as satisfied with it as I've
>been
>with GPGshell,
[...]
>WinPT: http://winpt.sourceforge.net/en/
the most recent winpt's have not been there for some time now,
they are on Timo's site here:
http://www.stud.uni-hannover.de/~twoaday/winpt.html
while i agree with you that gpgshell has a 'smooth' PGP feel to it,
if the last time you checked winpt was from the sourceforge site,
you might consider looking at it again from the other link
new advantages:
(1) complete installer package, so that gnupg new users don't need
to play with registry settings
[caveat: this makes it harder to install gpgshell afterwards, as
there are some windows path details that gpgshell is fussy about,
if you already have gpgshell installed, just install winpt without
the gnupg installer]
(2) ability to see all keys and keyid's that the message is
encrypted to, directly from the decryption window
[gpgshell either just gives a passphrase entry window if you want
to see the passphrase as you are typing it, but doesn't tell you
which 'keyid' or even which key it is for,
or it gives you the gnupg command line interface to enter the
passphrase],
also, winpt does not require the passphrase to be cached, in order
to let you see the passphrase as you are typing it in,
and allows this for 'all' gnupg functions;
key generation passwords, key editing password changing, signing a
key, etc.
(3) ability to choose between the primary signing key, and the
signing subkey
[gpgshell uses the gnupg default of using the latest signing subkey
for signing, regardless of clicking on the 'primary' signing key]
(4) the key editing functions are all selectable in the key editing
window,
[gpgshell key editing just transfers you to the gnupg command line
key editing interface]
(5) winpt provides 'wiping' to the same standards as eraser
(DoD or Gutmann settings)
smart card and encrypted disc containers (similar to pgpdisk and
scramdisc) will be added in future versions
i would suggest trying 'both' gpgshell and winpt
and let users decide which they are happier with,
they can always keep 'both' and switch back and forth for whatever
they find more convenient
vedaal
Concerned about your privacy? Follow this link to get
secure FREE email: http://www.hushmail.com/?l=2
Free, ultra-private instant messaging with Hush Messenger
http://www.hushmail.com/services-messenger?l=434
Promote security and make money with the Hushmail Affiliate Program:
http://www.hushmail.com/about-affiliate?l=427
More information about the Gnupg-users
mailing list