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@BollerwagenPicard @lupyuen

I think it’s.

Two AES-128 ciphers, currently the most widely used and the most secure. Network Session Key (NwkSKey) - ensures the authenticity of devices on the network.

Application Session Key (AppSKey) - the security and confidentiality of data transmitted through the network. In fact, the network key allows the operator to secure their network while the application key allows the application provider to secure the data that passes through the network.

That is, application data is encrypted with AppSKey.

https://www.lama.univ-savoie.fr/mediawiki/index.php/Vulnerabilite_des_reseaux_lorawan

@lupyuen Hmmm, reads to me like Unity's saying "Weta's software & models should rely be put on market, rather than tied up for internal use".

@lupyuen In my experience, 90% of mobile app code is glue, and 99% of the time the app isn't so mission critical that the occasional crash is unaffordable. So I'm thinking why I would want to use a language like Rust for app development... I'd seriously rather use JavaScript.

The most joy I ever had building a sort of app was using Node on the server and Vue on the client to build a small web app.

Followed by Java on Android and then ObjC on iOS. Haven't tried Kotlin or Swift, but there's few things I truly miss in Java. Not sure if I'd even like null safety, need to try it some time.

"Unity announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Weta Digital"

blog.unity.com/news/welcome-we

"TensorFlow Lite Micro: Embedded Machine Learning on TinyML Systems"

arxiv.org/abs/2010.08678

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