Rose, My Rocket-Brain!
"Rose, My Rocket-Brain!" is a 2004 single by the band Stereolab for the tour of the album Margerine Eclipse. It was available as a 7" vinyl and 3" CD. The back of the CD sleeve lists the first two songs, "Rose, My Rocket-Brain! (Rose, le cerveau électronique de ma fusée!)" and "Banana Monster ne répond plus" the wrong way round.
"Rose, My Rocket-Brain!" | |
---|---|
Single by Stereolab | |
Released | 2004 |
Genre | Post-rock |
Label | Duophonic (UK) |
Unlike other tour singles which were largely instrumental, "Rose, My Rocket-Brain!" has a full lyric. The song questions the validity of the 2003 invasion of Iraq and represents a return to the more directly political nature of the group's early material.
Track listing
- "Rose, My Rocket-Brain! (Rose, le cerveau électronique de ma fusée!)"
- "Banana Monster ne répond plus"
- "University Microfilms International"
gollark: If the probability of false positives is low relative to the number of possible keys, it's probably fine™.
gollark: I don't think you can *in general*, but you'll probably know in some cases what the content might be. Lots of network protocols and such include checksums and headers and defined formats, which can be validated, and English text could be detected.
gollark: But having access to several orders of magnitude of computing power than exists on Earth, and quantum computers (which can break the hard problems involved in all widely used asymmetric stuff) would.
gollark: Like how in theory on arbitrarily big numbers the fastest way to do multiplication is with some insane thing involving lots of Fourier transforms, but on averagely sized numbers it isn't very helpful.
gollark: It's entirely possible that the P = NP thing could be entirely irrelevant to breaking encryption, actually, as it might not provide a faster/more computationally efficient algorithm for key sizes which are in use.
References
- "Rose, My Rocket-Brain!". Stereolab Official Site. Stereolab. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
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