SETI@home & RC5 66
abh writes "The SETI@home project is now sending new (fresh) work units, after having spent a few weeks in a rut sending the same 2 days worth of observations repeatedly. Read the announcement " As well, we were sent word from a reader that we've lost the #1 position at RC5. Head over and sign up!
seti (Score:1)
My question for the nerds out there isn't about number crunching... is SETI going to really tell us if we find something? If my computer finds a signal among a trillion radio waves I want it to light up like a pinball machine and spit quarters out of the floppy drive.
Can't even get started (Score:1)
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Here's your account info:
Email address: [xxx]
OK to show email address? no
Name: grinder
OK to show name? yes
Country: France
Postal code: 75003
Computer location: Work
Everything correct? (y/n) y
gethostbyname: Success
Server host unknown
This is the version information:
Platform: i386-pc-linux-gnulibc1-static
Version: 1.2
I have tried all three Linux ports with no luck.
i386-pc-linux-gnu-gnulibc2.1 (dumps core)
i386-pc-linux-gnulibc1 (gethostbyname fails)
i386-pc-linux-gnulibc1-static (see above output)
Curiously enough, nslookup knows about setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu:
Non-authoritative answer:
Name: milkyway.SSL.Berkeley.EDU
Address: 128.32.18.165
Aliases: setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu
I am lost. Please give me a clue.
David
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Cosm URL (Score:1)
http://cosm.mithral.com/
Re:Here's a question (Score:1)
Sounds like a very cool idea - SETI@Home has already used over 11,000 years of CPU time that would have otherwise gone to waste. Imagine what could happen if any serious researcher who needed more power could plug into that?
Re:how to sign up... (Score:1)
Re:how to sign up... (Score:1)
Re:Use of other processors besides main CPU (Score:2)
Unfortunately, because the hardware is so highly optimized for making pretty pictures, it is pretty much useless for doing other things, like cracking encryption.
Theoretically, it is possible. Most 3d hardware needs to have things like add, multiply, etc in order to do the other stuff. But depending on the implementation of the hardware, it could be very difficult to access these parts, and even the access itself would probably be enough to slow things down quite a bit. It's akin to asking your sound card to act like a modem. While this is possible (see soundmodem drivers for linux kernel) it's not necessarily what the hardware is good at. (soundmodem driver is limited to 9600 baud max, using X.25 packet protocol, half duplex.)
It would require a massive code effort to warp the rc5 client around to use the OpenGL library for things the OpenGL library was never meant to do, and it probably wouldn't be much of a win anyway due to the odd manipulations you would have to go through to make a task-specific processor do things that its not specific to doing.
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/tech_news.html (Score:1)
The SETI@Home announcement link is wrong (Score:3)
If you read the actual announcements, you'll see it was only one day when the same 2 days worth of work units (actually not even two complete days, just 115 work units from 2 different days) were being sent, then the project moved to about 30k units, which were all that were avaible at the time. Now several months worth of data is avaible. They go into detail as to problems they have had and their solutions on this page, it's rather interesting...
Almost surely (A.) (Score:1)
A. One of those people that store up a huge number of blocks for a month or so, then send them all in, and bask in the glory of seeing themselves as #1 in the daily rankings.
This seems the most likely by far. He just had better luck than I did the day a couple months back when I checked in a bit over 100K blocks, but:
a) the last 8K missed the stat run so I only showed 92K (Doh!), and
b) some other guy in Japan had to pick the same day to check in his 160K, so I was #2 (Arrghh!)
Is there anything wrong with that? It's harmless and it makes this more competitive and hence more fun and leads to higher key rates. Sure, it's at least a little bit silly, maybe even immature, but anyone who says that the resultant "spiking" of the stat distribution does some kind of real harm is just showing that he takes this even more seriously than I, when I'm already acknowledging that I'm taking it way too seriously and need a life. The only real harm I can think of is the possibility that hoarding the blocks could cause duplicate work, but that is so remote as to be insignificant.
As for SlashDot losing the #1 spot, AnandTech checked in half a million blocks yesterday, but they've only done 38 million total, to our 140 million in the same 600 days, so unless they've got a new key-cracking supercomputer or otherwise massively increased their horsepower, it must also have been a matter of saving them up. I think it's kinda cool that they managed to do it, even though it knocked us down a rung, which, of course, means war. Like I said, competition is fun.
Hey, wait, it looks like they were also #2 the previous day. Maybe they have got the horsepower to keep this up. Do something! Let's see, how many more clients can I install here at work?
David Gould
Re:sign up? (Score:1)
Moo!
dB!
distributed.net Human Interface
Re:how to sign up... (Score:1)
Change all of your clients to use the new email address, and submit a block or two. On the main stats page, click on "Edit Your Information". Enter your email address and your d.net password (If you don't have a password, instrictions for retrieving it are found elsewhere in this thread). Go to the bottom of the page and retire your address.
SETI announcement? (Score:1)
SETI@Home is still overbooked (Score:1)
According to the stats, it takes each of the 600.000 users about 1 1/2 CPU-days to process a block.
So they generate 15.000, and consume about 400.000 units per day. Go figure.
My computers stay with PrimeNet until they are overbooked by less than a factor of 3. (but THEN I'll be back!)
http://www.mersenne.org. At least there are enough prime numbers to go around.
http://www.distributed.net/clients.html (Score:1)
lol! me too (Score:1)
Re:Here's a question (Score:1)
Yes, there is a existing project to use distributed computing for real work and allow researchers and others to plug in.
Cosm [mithral.com]
Re:how to sign up... (Score:1)
Is it really that hard to just go to the main distributed.net [http] page, and type "change email" in the search box on the bottom-left? First result that popped up. Took me about 10 seconds to find it.
Really... READ those FAQ's please people. USE the search engines. It makes life so much easier. Cheers.
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'We have no choice in what we are. Yet what are we,
but the sum of our choices.' --Rob Grant
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Re:sign up? (Score:1)
Distributed.net Stats FAQ [distributed.net]
I signed you up. (Score:1)
Now check the slashdot stats and choose to sign in.
BTW,
According to the stats your avg. rate is 200kk/s and not 800kk/s.
(or is it because you ran it only part of the time)
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Re:Here's a question (Score:2)
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Slashdot never *had* the number 1 position... (Score:1)
-B
sign up? (Score:1)
I am running distributed.net on my machince at work. and I avg about 800 keys per sec and always running it.
I have gone to the stats site, gone though it, click on "I want to join this team" and got a usernamer and PW box, I have tried several things in it, nothing seems to work
and when I set up my cleint I don't recall getting a username and password, all it wanted was a email address.
so if u want me on ur team, tell me how to join up.
Re:sign up? (Score:1)
it said to get a password . but it doesn't tell u how, when I click on "edit participant info" I still get a login box, and I try, and same error.
how to sign up... (Score:1)
first make sure you have at least run the distributed.net client at least once, and useing the email u setup in ur client. goto stats page [distributed.net]
goto view stats. and in the participant search box, insert the same email u used in ur client, go though that, and at the bottom click on mail me my password...
then check ur mail. get ur password, go back to the site, and now in ur username use ur email and for the password use the password that was in the email sent to u
BTW I find this to be an extremely ODD login process. does anyone else think so?
Thanks, nerds :) (Score:1)
I would like thank you all for the effort u wasted in tellins me and everyone else that is possible wondering just how to sign up to this thing
and yes my stats say 200 Keys
but that will change to 800, because right now I am avg. 900 keys / sec and over night, I avg more than 1000.
and since I am always connected to the net, I always have this thing runnings. so its cool.
Re:how to sign up... (Score:1)
but I am running the windows GUI version and u can edit configuration by clicking on file > enter configuration
and change ur email there. and that will probably reflect on that stats, and I do not know if u will be associated with ur old stats and any teams u might be on. if not, try the FAQ, that might have some useless info
Re:You didn't really lose 1st... (Score:1)
-Chris
Re:Here's a question (Score:1)
CComp> 'This should be used for X instead of Y,
CComp> and right now! Change it! Change it!!
CComp> Nownownow!!' Mebbe the intermediate steps
CComp> are NECESSARY to get to where they want it,
CComp> but no one cares aboutthat. Gotta be
CComp> instantaneous or nothing. Call it the
CComp> McDonald's Syndrome.
Their FAQ makes little mention of using this factorization software in the larger context of generalized scientific and mathematical research. The closest they come is stating a goal of "feasibility of cooperative networked multiprocessing," with no mention of client security issues, or an API set for future developers, or how timesharing would work. That's what my question was about -- indeed, a cursory search of distributed.net's pages revel no developments along these lines. Or have you seen some place where they address these questions? Call it my McDonald's curiosity.
Re:Here's a question (Score:1)
Assuming that the researcher's computational problem can be cut into fine-grained enough chunks (the way SETI's work and prime number factorization can), a sufficiently large generalized distributed computational system would be a god-send.
Here's a question (Score:2)
Is there an easy process for researchers to utilize this stuff? If not, it might be a Good Thing to set up.
(It'd have to be secure, I suppose, and in a best-case scenario could involve timesharing without administrative hassle...)
You didn't really lose 1st... (Score:1)
mark_hodgkinson@bigfoot.com did 120,403 blocks yesterday, at an average of 374,079 KKeys/sec.
He jumped 25988 places in the indivdual rankings from yesterday to today.
Why do people get off doing this?
Some how I doubt this... (Score:1)
That's not nearly consistant with his huge 'spurt' of blocks yesterday.
This is:
A. One of those people that store up a huge number of blocks for a month or so, then send them all in, and bask in the glory of seeing themselves as #1 in the daily rankings.
B. A stats glich, that only affects this one guy.
C. A hack.
Which do you think is correct?
While I'm at it...
Anandtech is averaging 199,219 KKeys/sec.
slashdot.org is averageing 731,000 KKeys/sec.
Heh. Lots of luck catching up at those rates. You're only 102,868,204 blocks behind.
Re:how to sign up... (Score:1)
I changed my email address, but I've been running the distributed.net client for months, and I've cracked thousands of blocks... is there anyway to change my email address (if I win
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Chad Okere
Re:Here's a question (Score:1)
One is the issue of trusting the source of the client. We're all pretty sure that the 11000 CPU-years of time contributed to SETI@home has been to process radio telescope data (even if it's repeated), not cracking someone's password file, but with the potential for many people to put out distributed clients, the issue of trust becomes more relevant.
Another issue is whether the task has some commercial viability. I would be a lot less inclined to run a client on my PC, whether at home or at work, if it was furthering research which could ultimately be competitive with my employer, resulting in my being out of a job. As long as the tasks are purely in the public interest and/or are pure research and mathematics, that's not an issue, but if, for example, Microsoft put out a client that would do super optimization on work units of Windows 2000 code, would anybody be happy with running that on their Linux box?
Re:sign up? (Score:1)
Fresh units? (Score:1)
Re:Fresh units? (Score:1)
Well (Score:2)
Maybe I should donate... (Score:1)
Re:Maybe I should read more carfully... (Score:1)
Re:Where did all the clients go? (Score:1)
Re:Here's a question (Score:2)
Too many people look at a thing and say, 'This should be used for X instead of Y, and right now! Change it! Change it!! Nownownow!!' Mebbe the intermediate steps are NECESSARY to get to where they want it, but no one cares about that. Gotta be instantaneous or nothing. Call it the McDonald's Syndrome.
It isn't going to happen overnight, but at least by supporting the distributed.net RC5 project, it will happen soon.
Re:sign up? (Score:1)
Re:Here's a question (Score:1)
One problem with putting this sort of system to practical use is that for most real-world problems parallel scaling only works up to a point; after that your parallel efficiency tends to drop through the floor. It is even possible for a problem to run slower in parallel than it does in serial. As a result, distributed computing efforts tend to gravitate toward the so-called "embarrassingly parallel" problems.
There is also another problem that "researchers on tight budgets" face in using all these spare cycles, which is that often your carefully crafted serial code has to be completely rewritten to get it to work in parallel. This is a lot of work (particularly if your code is some crufty old fortran monstrosity), and even if things go smoothly you have to spend a lot of time testing the new version of the code. Unless you're really hurting for resources it's often not worth the effort. You would probably be better off spending the time and effort writing a proposal for time at one of the national supercomputing centers.
-r
Re:Fresh units? (Score:1)
Re:Teams (Score:1)
Teams (Score:1)
There can be only one.
Re:SETI announcement? (Score:1)
Re:how to sign up... (Score:1)
I'm losing my old email! Will all my stats be lost? [distributed.net]
eh.
They Built a Key Cracking Machine... (Score:1)
Here's the link:
http://www.montac.com/
V2K
To get your RC5 password (Score:1)