+gpg --list-secret-keys
+
+The first line (starting with sec) will include your key length followed
+by the type of key (e.g. 1024D) followed by a slash and then your keyid.
+
+Using your OpenPGP authentication key for SSH
+---------------------------------------------
+
+Once you have created a OpenPGP authentication key, you can feed it to
+your ssh agent by running seckey2sshagent (currently this is found in
+the src directory). Please run:
+
+./seckey2sshagent --help
+
+And read the directions - particularly the part about being dropped into
+a gpg edit session. This is a work in progress!
+
+NOTE: the current version of openpgp2ssh does *not* deal well with
+encrypted keys (as of 2008-07-26)
+
+FIXME: using the key with a single session?
+
+Miscellaneous
+-------------
+
+Users can also maintain their own authorized_keys files, for users
+that would be logging into their accounts. This is primarily useful
+for accounts on hosts that are not already systematically using the
+monkeysphere for user authentication. If you're not sure whether this
+is the case for your host, ask your system administrator.
+
+If you want to do this as a regular user, use the
+update-authorized_keys command:
+
+$ monkeysphere update-authorized_keys