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SETI to Upgrade Software, Telescope

Professor_Quail writes "Space.com reports that SETI@home is planning to transfer it's operations from Arecibo to another telescope in Australia, where they say lies an increased chance of finding extra-terrestrials. The Australian telescope is more powerful, with a wider view of the sky; scientists are betting that this new telescope will also help find signs of 'shriveling' black holes."

238 comments

  1. So apparently by __aahlyu4518 · · Score: 0

    They already know where they live...

    1. Re:So apparently by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      if there are such things as "aliens", they must be tone deaf not to hear our extremely loud planet.
      1. we have been here for 3 million years, which is a spec in time, just calculate the odds in finding a species evolving in that same time frame.
      2. This planet will become un-inhabitable within 4billion years, if we dont find a way to colonize we will be extinct, (this rule more or less applies to any civilisation)
      3. Humans are not a "nice species", why contact us, it would be the same as contracting a virus
      4. if darwins evolutionairy principles apply to all life anywhere, then be affraid be very affraid: cuz evolutionairy we are seriously outclassed when someone knocks on our door at this point in time. To them we could be as dumb as cattle, and we all know what shoes are made of........

      to be honest i think seti@home will never be used for anything more then crack codes and make calculations. (which is what it partly is being used for anyways)
    2. Re:So apparently by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I am not sure, but I think it is Robert Heinlein who said "we humans use planets up. When we use earth up, we'll find another planet." I think all of the arrogance and hope of the human species is wrapped up in that one statement.

    3. Re:So apparently by Alphi1 · · Score: 1

      Bear in mind, as "loud" as our planet is, we've only been broadcasting signals into space (i.e. radio, tv, etc.) for less than 100 years. Considering that radio waves travel considerably slower than the speed of light, even our earliest signals are at most 100 light-years away. Most likely only a fraction of that. And there really aren't a whole lot of stars within that 100 light-years radius. Consider that the nearest is over 4 light-years distant. Even if there IS life in that star system (which is unlikely), the chances are, they might not have been "listening" for radio waves coming from our little planet. Remember, space is a pretty big place. Not only that, but a radio signal travelling across 4 light-years would be INCREDIBLY weak.

    4. Re:So apparently by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lay off the drugs dude. I think your transcendental meditations during Independence Day were not a wise choice, for you are now quite asexual.

    5. Re:So apparently by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Considering that radio waves travel considerably slower than the speed of light, even our earliest signals are at most 100 light-years away.

      Eh? How do you manage to get any form of electromagnetic radiation to travel at less than c through space?..

    6. Re:So apparently by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You wouldn't be related to Physics Genius, would you?

  2. What the first message will say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Take me to your leader

    1. Re:What the first message will say by hplasm · · Score: 0

      Take me to your leader, Cobber..

      --
      ...and he grinned, like a fox eating shit out of a wire brush.
    2. Re:What the first message will say by pinko-rat-bastard · · Score: 1, Funny

      "Send more Chuck Berry"

      --
      YooHoo/2U2
    3. Re:What the first message will say by danimrich · · Score: 0

      What their first message will say: We cannot understand you. (of course, it'll be some alien language)

      --
      where's all that Karma?
    4. Re:What the first message will say by Y-Leen · · Score: 2

      Nah. It'll say...

      FRIST POTS!

    5. Re:What the first message will say by ccgr · · Score: 1

      I never seen anything unique with my Seti screensaver..has anyone else? Perhaps they don't want to talk. :P

      --
      http://www.bookforce.net
    6. Re:What the first message will say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      No, it will say

      "Enlarge your PENIS!!!"

      or maybe

      "I don't normally respond to chain letters, but..."

      or possibly even

      "Make Money Fast!"

    7. Re:What the first message will say by danimrich · · Score: 0

      Perhaps they tried to contact us during the stone age.

      --
      where's all that Karma?
    8. Re:What the first message will say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it will say :

      "All your base are belong to us!"

      http://www.planettribes.com/allyourbase/

      Massimo

  3. FYI: Parkes "stared" (pardon the pun) ... by N+Monkey · · Score: 5, Informative

    Parkes is the radio telescope that stared in the movie "The Dish" which describes when it was used to receive the transmissions of the first moon landing.

    1. Re:FYI: Parkes "stared" (pardon the pun) ... by bscott · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As for The Dish - it's a very nice movie if you can locate it. Patrick Warburton and Sam Neill star, and it's a fine example of rural Australian culture and personalities (as opposed to the rather Hollywood-ized films like "Crocodile Dundee", or the self-caricature of the Croc Hunter...)
      I visited Parkes earlier this year and believe me, they don't let you forget for a SECOND that The Dish was filmed there! "As Seen in The Dish" signs abound for miles around the place. Of course, the filming was probably the biggest thing to happen in Parkes since the moon landing itself...

      --
      Perfectly Normal Industries
    2. Re:FYI: Parkes "stared" (pardon the pun) ... by Hittite+Creosote · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And their website is here.

    3. Re:FYI: Parkes "stared" (pardon the pun) ... by anonymous+cupboard · · Score: 2

      Managed to catch up with it on Star Movies out in India. It was good and I liked the representation of Ozzie politicians, particularly the then prime minister.

    4. Re:FYI: Parkes "stared" (pardon the pun) ... by jasontheking · · Score: 2, Funny

      from the dish...

      It turns out it's the largest radio telescope in the southern hemisphere.

      What's it doing in the middle of a sheep paddock?

      The Americans spend billions of dollars to let us watch a man walk on the moon and in the end it falls to you blokes. How do you feel about that?

      A lot better before you opened your trap.

      sums things up quite nicely I think. baa!

    5. Re:FYI: Parkes "stared" (pardon the pun) ... by ptbarnett · · Score: 1
      As for The Dish [imdb.com] - it's a very nice movie if you can locate it.

      If you can't find it locally, you can rent The Dish from NetFlix.

    6. Re:FYI: Parkes "stared" (pardon the pun) ... by susano_otter · · Score: 2

      I won't lie to you: Netflix is the bomb. But it's also been sitting on the shelves at my local Blockbuster for almost a year now.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    7. Re:FYI: Parkes "stared" (pardon the pun) ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It also uses a *lot* of artistic licence. But the bits about being on the very edge of the telescope's travel to pick up the moon walk while 110 km/hr winds were pushing the dish right to its structural limits are both true.

      Nice feel good film, and a fitting memorial to a lesser-known but vital part of Apollo 11. Great sound-track as well (especially with Russell Morris' definitive bit of Oz psychadelia "The Real Thing" near the start behind film of a Saturn V launch).

  4. Shriveling Black Holes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " scientists are betting that this new telescope will also help find signs of 'shriveling' black holes."

    What pray tell is a "shriveling" black hole? One that's been in the cosmic wash too long?

  5. Re:Extraterrestrials in Australia? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    "Thank god the Americans got the puritans and we got the convicts".
    - Editorial from an Australian newspaper with reference to Bill Clinton's afairs

  6. hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    weren't they using SERENDIP and i believe it was sponsored by Aurthur C Clarke

  7. Is that such a good idea? by avoisin · · Score: 1, Interesting

    It seems like if we're looking for aliens, the last place we'd like to look is in the middle of a black hole.

    Then again, there seems to be some incentive to move to another continent just to look back into space, so they must know something I don't ...

    1. Re:Is that such a good idea? by WheelDweller · · Score: 5, Funny

      "It seems like if we're looking for aliens, the last place we'd like to look is in the middle of a black hole. "

      Well, you see black holes compress matter- it's like a thick-spot in space, since a mass the size of Jupiter can fit into the size of a strawberry. Imagine for a moment how many thousands of alien civilizations could fit inside these black holss...

      All of them screaming, "LET US OUTTA HERE! IT'S CRAMPED AND SOMEONE FARTED!"

      Yeah, I'm sure that's it. :)

      It's probably signalling a change of just what kind of actual research-program we'll be running, but it'll look the same. One thing bothers me though: higher-res means slower conversion of the data. Instead of a year to examine a year's data, it could be decades...

      --
      --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    2. Re:Is that such a good idea? by Big+Mark · · Score: 3, Informative

      "Well, you see black holes compress matter- it's like a thick-spot in space, since a mass the size of Jupiter can fit into the size of a strawberry. Imagine for a moment how many thousands of alien civilizations could fit inside these black holss..." Black holes are singularities - that is, a single point in space with an infinite density. Nothing can live there, as everything is shredded into it's component sub-atomic particles before they even get there. They are formed by the collapse of massive bodies in on themselves - a favourite is when white dwarfs (the still-beating hearts of dead stars) accrete too much matter and go over a critical limit (something like 1.6 solar masses. I'm not too sure on this, and my textbooks are so far away...) leading to them collapsing in on themselves and a black hole forming. You can't get closer to a black hole and return from it than it's event horizon, the surface around it where the escape velocity is >= the speed of light. Well, you can, but you won't be around to tell the tale! If a hole is rotating there is a region known as the ergosphere where it is possible to get the universes most impressive gravitational slingshot from. Even a small black hole takes around 10^60 years to evaporate. The universe is about 1.4x10^9 years old. It's gonna be a long time until the black holes start disappearing, never mind the supermassive ones at the heart of galaxies. Physics is great.

    3. Re:Is that such a good idea? by WheelDweller · · Score: 2, Insightful

      [Long, probably accurate discertation skipped for brevity]

      I'm told, admittedly by The Learning Channel, et al, that "each galaxy has a black hole in the center." That makes me wonder...it's probably there for a reason. Yeah, I know- great place to dump the trash....but maybe it's something more. I'd like to think that perhaps they might be connected....and if we could survive the massive gravity, that would be a way around the whole speed-of-light thing, or at least shorten it a lot.

      I'll bet that won't make any sense at all in the morning. I'm turning in. Night all!

      --
      --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    4. Re:Is that such a good idea? by banana+fiend · · Score: 1

      It is already taking years to process a years worth of data (millions of years of computer time), so this is going to take longer, but it NEVER happened in real time :)

      --
      Johns: Well, how does it look now? Riddick: Looks clear.
    5. Re:Is that such a good idea? by compwiz3688 · · Score: 1

      All of them screaming, "LET US OUTTA HERE! IT'S CRAMPED AND SOMEONE FARTED!"

      Oh, so no wonder we're detecting X-rays from black holes. :)

    6. Re:Is that such a good idea? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget to check your sense of humor at the door next time. Otherwise, you'll laugh at the jokes instead of posting long serious replies, and we can't have that on Slashdot.

  8. "Shriveling" black holes by Xenographic · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Would someone explain exactly what they mean by "shriveling black holes?" Do they mean ones that are giving off Hawking radiation (don't they all do that)? How else can they "shrivel?"

    1. Re:"Shriveling" black holes by Xenographic · · Score: 3, Informative

      Guess I should've read the article first:

      According to Hawking's theory, "black holes give off radiation and therefore lose mass," Anderson explains. "So small black holes will basically kind of dry up and go away. In the moment of their disappearance, the theory predicts that they will give up a short burst of broad band radio radiation. Our data from Arecibo is an ideal place to look for that sort of thing."

    2. Re:"Shriveling" black holes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hang on a minute. Some retard doesn't read the article and asks "What's this all about?" - he gets modded up +2 interesting. The retard then reads the article, answers the "What's this all about?" question he asked just before reading the damn thing and gets +2 informative. Whassup with you guys? He gets the first +2 for asking the same question as all the other non-article reading retards, but doing it out loud, and the second for posting the part of the article that answered the question all the retards were asking themselves, thereby saving them from *gasp* actually reading the article themselves.

    3. Re:"Shriveling" black holes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where is "-1 Whoring" when you need it?

    4. Re:"Shriveling" black holes by BigRedBall · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I can get broadband from a shriveling black hole??? L33t!!! ;)
      j/k

    5. Re:"Shriveling" black holes by LudditeMind · · Score: 1

      Quote from pbs.org

      "The reason goes back to quantum mechanics and the uncertainty principle. For very brief periods of time, matter or energy can be created from "empty" space because no such thing as truly empty space exists. Hawking realized that if a particle/anti-particle pair came into existence near the event horizon of a black hole, one might fall into the hole before annihilating its anti-particle. The other particle could then escape the gravitational clutches of the black hole, appearing to an outside observer as radiation."

    6. Re:"Shriveling" black holes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you mean "-5 Whoring" ? But seriously, I rather read a redundant, on-topic question and the answer than any off-topic ideological rant/troll talk or obvious jokes.

  9. whee.. now i might too.. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

    ..attend to this, seti@home just looking for extra terrestial signs of life hasn't too much appealed to me(for various reasons, mainly because it's still looking for a needle from siberia, and wouldn't carry anything intresting even if some kind of sign was found, except create havoc by shaking people's minds..).

    black hole's however seem like more possible and some extra info about them could help scientists tweak their theories.. wich could lead to something intresting, creative things.

    of course, i am aware of folding@home, no need to reply pointing to it and that it has more use than some theories of space-time-continuum-and-all-things(tm), but there is also counter arguments why people don't want to fold@home(mainly on the who gets the monetary benefit which could end up being huge from the research&etc)..

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    1. Re:whee.. now i might too.. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      itseasiassa ei ole. ja luentokin loppu!

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    2. Re:whee.. now i might too.. by Treeluvinhippy · · Score: 2

      except create havoc by shaking people's minds

      Isn't that reason enough to download the client? It is for me.

      --
      >
    3. Re:whee.. now i might too.. by budgenator · · Score: 2

      I run seti@haome continuously, and the main reason I do it isn't in hope of finding an extraestrial signals of inteligent origin, but to find any extraterestial signals of unexplained or unknown origin. New natural phenonia or evidence of predicted but un-observed phenomia is much more likely than an ET phone home message. the machine runs 24x7 anyways, no reason to shut Linux down each night or what ever and the internet is always on so why not cruch some data?

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    4. Re:whee.. now i might too.. by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      There is no need to shut down your computer, except it consumes 300W of power 24/7 not counting your monitor. If you have a recent Athlon or P-IV it's
      even more, and worse still if you run SETI@HOME with its screen saver (even with the monitor turned off), as it exercices the CPU and the GPU.

      That works out to be 2.7MWh over the whole year. At $.15/kWh this work out to about $400. More if you use A/C to cool down your room. In fact I'd be surprised if your PC power consumption does not account for half of your electricity bill in one way or another.

      I did that calculation myself and now I turn my PC off when I don't use it.

      I reckon SETI@Home is only worthwhile on computers that have to stay up for some other reason, and I think it should be on all the time but limited to some pre-determined portion of the CPU (10% say).

    5. Re:whee.. now i might too.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't consume 300W 24/7. Reading the label on your power supply, isn't what your machine is actually using. You'd be unlucky if it was using more than 100W when number crunching. (HDD spun down, no sound, monitor off, etc). And thats with current top of the range equipment. (And if you were using a multi-meter, I suggest you read up on measuring switching power supplies)

      The screensaver doesn't use your GPU. And serious SETI@home users use the command line client so they can save the CPU cycles that was going into running all the pretty graphics.

      I turn my computer off to save wear on the fans (at the cost of causing wear on the HDD, but then again my HDD powers down after an hour so turning it off probably doesn't cause any additional wear.)

  10. two ideas...pay attention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I'll type very slowly, so I don't get ahead of you. The topic was two-fold.
    • A - New dish and software for SETI to look for vertically challenged green men
    • B - New plan to _also_ look for iron-poor black whores...I mean holes...I mean...wait. You know what I mean.

    They don't intend to scour the holes for VCGM...it's two different outings. You know, like going to the store to shop for elephants and popcorn. You do know the difference between elephants and popcorn, right? No? !! Man, I am never sending you to the store for popcorn.
  11. New Software by rchatterjee · · Score: 1

    Hopefully the new software will be SMP ready like the distributed.net client was, a lot of people have access to multi-cpu systems but don't have the time or patience to set up the system to run multiple instances of the program to take advantage of all the CPUs.

    1. Re:New Software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      come on - that's trivial! what particular OS does make that hard to do ?

  12. SETI future by jukal · · Score: 5, Informative
    See the original "future directions" page at berkeley.edu - which is the best source for knowing where SETI is going.

    The Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico receives information from about one third of the sky, all in the northern celestial hemisphere. But what if ET is lurking in the southern skies? The Parkes telescope in Australia is the largest radio telescope in the southern hemisphere and can observe all of the southern sky. Fortunately, SETI colleagues in Australia have agreed to colloborate with SETI@home and host a new data recorder at Parkes. Work on this new SETI@home data recorder is well under way. The new instrument will record data from 13 places on the sky simultaneously, observing 13 "beams" at a time compared to the 1 "beam" at Arecibo. We are trying to raise funds to conduct these southern hemisphere observations for SETI@home. Funding permitting, we expect the new data recorder to be installed and operational at Parkes in early 2003. For more information on the Southern Hemisphere SETI@home plans, see "SETI@home Gearing to Expand the Search" at the Planetary Society

    They also name "AstroPulse - the search for pulsars, ET, and black holes" and "To support future projects we are developing the Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing (BOINC)"

    There is also the planned project time line until 2005.

    1. Re:SETI future by .@. · · Score: 2

      Minor nitpick: "SETI" is a different project than "SETI@Home". The best source for information about SETI is, of course, SETI's website.

      --
      .@.
  13. good point...give me a minute to catch up, tho by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know...I can remember when I could easily examine a week's worth of data in one afternoon. Next thing I know, it's taking me more like two days, then three.

    One time, I took a whole month off and got behind six weeks....it took me forever to get caught up...that was two years ago. Best I can figure, if I can average a month's worth per week for the next 90 days, I'll be two weeks ahead and ready for another break.

  14. As an employee of SETI@home ... by muon1183 · · Score: 5, Informative

    and a physics student at UC Berkeley, I thought I would just provide a little more information for those of you who are too lazy to read the article. SETI@home has been collecting data at the Arecibo radio telescope for the last several years, and we have observed pretty much everything that is visible from that location. We are building a new data recorder that will be capable of observing broadband data/many independent narrow bands, and we will be using this to observe in Australia. We have also applied to re-observe any interesting locations we have found at Arecibo, using this new equipment.

    For the last several years, we have been using the data we have gathered for several purposes, amongst which are mapping the Hydrogen distrobution in the milky way and searching for SETI. We are about to start a new project that will search for broadband pulses (which must be very short in durration), which can be encoded to have a reverse dopler effect, which would be a clear sign of ET. However, a normal pulse would be a sign of an evaporating black hole, which has been predicted but never observed.

    This new project will run on a system called BOINC, the Berkeley Open Infrasturcture for Network Computing (yes, it's open source, to be released under the Mozilla Public License). However, BOINC is not limited to running only Astro-Pulse (the previously mentioned project) and the next generation of SETI@home, but will also be running other independent distributed computing projects. More information is available at the BOINC and SETI@home websites.

    --

    There's no sig like SIGSEG
    1. Re:As an employee of SETI@home ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the last several years

      I hope you are not the one who will have the job of decoding the signal, because you cannot even speak english.

    2. Re:As an employee of SETI@home ... by Raffzahn · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      I hope you are not the one who will have the job of decoding the signal, because you cannot even speak english.

      But the ETs will - huh ?


    3. Re:As an employee of SETI@home ... by da+cog · · Score: 1

      > amongst which are mapping the Hydrogen distrobution in the milky way and searching for SETI

      I know that engineers love challenges and playing with cool toys like radiotelescopes, but in this case it might be easier just to go to their web site.

      (If only we could find the aliens on google too!)

      --
      Snarkiness is inversely proportional to wisdom because it emphasizes feeling right rather than being right.
    4. Re:As an employee of SETI@home ... by PD · · Score: 5, Funny

      we have observed pretty much everything that is visible from that location.

      Except for the aliens?

    5. Re: As an employee of SETI@home ... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > and a physics student at UC Berkeley, I thought I would just provide a little more information for those of you who are too lazy to read the article.

      Couldn't you provide something a little shorter, for those of us who are too lazy to read your whole post?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    6. Re:As an employee of SETI@home ... by goldfndr · · Score: 2, Funny
      For the last several years, we have been using the data we have gathered for several purposes, amongst which are mapping the Hydrogen distrobution in the milky way and searching for SETI.
      Have you tried a Google search?
      --
      Copyrights, Patents, Trademarks: temporary loans from the Public Domain, not real property ("intellectual" or otherwise)
    7. Re:As an employee of SETI@home ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey Grammar nazis, go to oxford.ac.ic.uk

      LoL. Where the fuck is that?

      If you're talking about Oxford University then refer to it by name, if you're talking about its domain name, then GET IT RIGHT.

      ic.ac.uk!=oxford.ac.uk

    8. Re:As an employee of SETI@home ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine for me and 99% of others.

      I've heard that 57.5% of statistics that people quote are just made up on the spot.

    9. Re:As an employee of SETI@home ... by Maxwell'sSilverLART · · Score: 1

      I thought I would just provide a little more information for those of you who are too lazy to read the article.

      You've been here before, haven't you?

      --
      Moderate drunk! It's more fun that way!
    10. Re: As an employee of SETI@home ... by Saeger · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      I was going to post the same joke - but I guess you'll get to take the karma hit instead. I'll join you when my reply gets modded Offtopic. :)

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    11. Re: As an employee of SETI@home ... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > I was going to post the same joke - but I guess you'll get to take the karma hit instead. I'll join you when my reply gets modded Offtopic. :)

      You should at least get a (+1, Accurate Prediction).

      Some days the moderators just aren't in the mood for jokes, I suppose.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    12. Re:As an employee of SETI@home ... by Noren · · Score: 1
      ...and searching for SETI.
      If you're a physics student at UC Berkeley I'm surprised you don't know where SETI is. I believe it has some ties with with the national NASA administration; you could ask there.
  15. Re:Very interesting stuff today on slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is this you?

  16. SETI and ETs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Siis mä en tajua, kuka pystyy määrittelemään, että on niiko "increased chance", eli nouseneet chanssit löytää extra terrestiaaleja? Ei sitä kukaan tiedemies pysty mitenkään määrittelemään. Asia olisi toinen mikäli olisimme löytäneet joitakin todisteita (evidence of extra terrestials) E.T.:stä! Mitään todisteita ei kuitenkaan nyt ole. Joten emme voi sanoa, että olisi jotenkin paremmat chanssit.

  17. Re:Parkes link by bscott · · Score: 1

    Parkes Observatory Homepage (does not mention SETI yet, at least not prominently)

    --
    Perfectly Normal Industries
  18. Re:Very interesting stuff today on slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    :) No, but I share his opinnion.

  19. Strong Evidence Found by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "...to transfer it's operations from Arecibo to another telescope in Australia, where they say lies an increased chance of finding extra-terrestrials. The Australian telescope is more powerful, with a wider view of the sky; scientists are betting that this new telescope will also help find signs of 'shriveling' black holes."

    This whole SETI nonsense is the strongest evidence yet of shriveling intelligence of human science. There is no logical reason why one part of the sky will have more chance of detecting a signal than any other.

    These guys are in it for the career only. This is not science.

    1. Re:Strong Evidence Found by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No joo, nyt mä näkisin hei, että sä oot jätkä asian ytimessä! Tajuutsä? Sä oot niiku asian ytimessä nyt! Se on hyvä se! Hei pidä toi! Se on nyt menoks, sano Annie Lenox.

    2. Re:Strong Evidence Found by Crazieeman · · Score: 4, Informative

      There is no logical reason why one part of the sky will have more chance of detecting a signal than any other.

      Yes there is. The Arecibo radio telescope is situated in the northern hemisphere, which can only view the outer arms of the Milky Way. Not only that, Aricebo can only sweep 30 degrees of the sky with 1 beam.

      Parkers is in the southern hemisphere, which can view the central dense mass (laymans' term - lots of freaking stars in the middle) of the Milky Way, and sweep 70 degrees of the sky with 13 beams.

      In other words, we went all over 30 degrees in the northern hemisphere, lets take a look at the highly populated (star-wise) section of the Milky Way in the unscanned southern hemisphere with a bigger and better telescope.

      Common sense, really.

    3. Re:Strong Evidence Found by Crazieeman · · Score: 1

      Parkes telescope.

      Bah, I cannot type at 5:30 in the morning.

    4. Re:Strong Evidence Found by anonymous+cupboard · · Score: 2

      It is considered unlikely that theer could be much likelihood of life as we know it anywhere near the Galactic core. The place has a black hole in it and lots of resulting radiation.

    5. Re:Strong Evidence Found by figjamjam · · Score: 1

      Why couldn't life exist in the radiation of the galactic core?
      We live in the radiation from our own sun (UV etc..)

      You often hear scientists finding life in weird and unusual places on our own planet. Places where conventional thinking would have no life existing at all.

      Whenever someone asks about aliens i always say the following....
      Life elsewhere in the universe ----- Definitely
      Inteligent life elsewhere in the universe ----- Probably
      Inteligent life coming to earth, sticking anal probes up the rears of country hicks in arkansas ---- Give me a break!

    6. Re:Strong Evidence Found by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > It is considered unlikely that theer could be much likelihood of life as we know it anywhere near the Galactic core. The place has a black hole in it and lots of resulting radiation.

      They want to listen in the general direction of the core, not just to the core itself; that direction includes a LOT more stars (and possibilities) than just the core area.

    7. Re:Strong Evidence Found by anonymous+cupboard · · Score: 2
      This is why I used the phrase "Life as we know it". We survive in an environment of relatively weak UV and very little cosmic rays or X-rays. Given our genetic structure, radiation is very damaging as it can break up genetic material. We already know that some creatures have better repair mechanisms than others, but in the Galatic core?

      Perhaps some completely different form of life could evolve there with much better repair mechanisms (RAID-5 Genomes anybody).

  20. eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you sure that's not BOINK, where overaged cheerleaders are forced to....
    'astro' what?
    Where I come from, a natural pulse is something not found on a corpse.

  21. Dear Maude by Graymalkin · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Please SETI@Home developers, if you chance my reading this please consider what I have to say.

    Graphicless client. Yes I'm aware there is a command line client, it is a main in the ass to get running and have STAY running for many people. I'd like a client I can load up as a service in WinNT or a deamon in Unix that will run without my futzing with it or having to do anything but have the damn thing load from init. I think there's a slew of other SETI@Home users who'd appriciate this as well.

    Worker threads. Oh please oh please oh please in your next revision add worker threads. I really don't need the graphics run in one thread and work units processed in another. I've got a dual P3 system that is on 24/7. Half of its processing capacity is sitting idle since I don't run the S@H screen saver. The monitor is off whenever the system isn't in use so the screen saver isn't much use.

    Those two are the most important for me really. I run a couple distributed computing clients at different times but I started with S@H and have a special place for it in my widdle heart. I'm in it for the search itself, not to just have a cool screen saver. I think there's plenty of others who wouldn't mind a built for speed version of your client.

    As an aside, does anyone know if any of the S@H work units are recycled and fed into other projects like studying pulsars or radio emitting variable stars? I'm not too up on the format of S@H work units but I thought it'd be cool if astronomers studying any sort of celestial phenomenae in radio bands could recycle WUs for their own purposes, even if they don't have a big distributed cluster working on them.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    1. Re:Dear Maude by loraksus · · Score: 5, Informative

      check out firedaemon, lets you run progs as a service under 2k / nt, also lets you assign processors per service, priorities etc
      only thing is, if the seti client can't find a wu, it quits, writes an error to the app log, firedaemon restarts it, etc etc and the app log fills up damn fast.
      firedaemon is also quite stable.
      I'm lazy google the thing :)

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    2. Re:Dear Maude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      > Yes I'm aware there is a command line client, it is a main in the ass to get running
      > and have STAY running for many people.

      setiloop.sh:

      #!/bin/sh

      while true
      do
      nice ./setiathome
      sleep 3600
      done

    3. Re:Dear Maude by legoleg · · Score: 1

      here you go....
      Firedaemon

    4. Re:Dear Maude by Repugnant_Shit · · Score: 1

      Windows:
      Google for SETI Driver. It lets you download many work units at once, and keeps your SETI client (command-line) running. And its just a click away in the systray. You can also change SETI's priority (low, normal, high).

      Linux:
      I've been using KSetiWatch, which has been working great, and it integrates into KDE's panel with a progress meter.

    5. Re:Dear Maude by xsbellx · · Score: 1
      I've got a dual P3 system that is on 24/7. Half of its processing capacity is sitting idle since I don't run the S@H screen saver.

      Why not run two instances of the command line version, binding each one to a specific processor. Just remember to start each instance from a different directory.
      --
      If VISTA is the answer, you didn't understand the question
    6. Re:Dear Maude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot.. STFU and stop wasting people's bandwidth.

      On a Dual P3, just run two instances of the command line client from different directories. Use the Task Manager to assign each one to a single CPU.

      ASS.

    7. Re:Dear Maude by mike_the_kid · · Score: 2
      Those two are the most important for me really. I run a couple distributed computing clients at different times but I started with S@H and have a special place for it in my widdle heart. I'm in it for the search itself, not to just have a cool screen saver. I think there's plenty of others who wouldn't mind a built for speed version of your client.


      One little tidbit I think I have to relate, regarding the screen saver:

      My pop's computer has the SETI screen saver burned into his monitor. Its not a great monitor or anything, but that has to be the worst screen saver I've ever seen: neat functions, except for the part about actually saving the screen.
      --
      Troll Like a Champion Today
    8. Re:Dear Maude by eheien · · Score: 2, Informative
      BOINC will allow for multiple applications running at once (processes rather than threads) so this solves your worker thread concern. As for your other question, SETI@home data are also being used in generating a neutral hydrogen map of the galaxy, as well as (eventually) in AstroPulse.

      Other concerns mentioned here involved the autodownloading of executables in BOINC. We're taking security very seriously in BOINC, and are using MD5 and 1024 bit RSA encryption to protect against malicious attacks, as well as other general design techniques. Finally, the issue of optimization. Since BOINC is open source, you can optimize it however you want, but there won't be much gain since BOINC itself does very little processing. As far as I know there's still no decision on whether to optimize the SETI@home science.

      For more information, you can check out the BOINC source and BOINC documentation

    9. Re:Dear Maude by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

      What I want is the ability to run the process as a low priority deamon. Even that shell needs to have setiathome attached to a terminal. That doesn't do me much good with a headless system that acts as only a fileserver, unless I maintain an active connection to it.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    10. Re:Dear Maude by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

      Sigh. I already do this, my complaint is with having to go through the trouble of running two processes in order to utilize two processors. It is a design flaw in my opinion. I've been using the command line client pretty much since I started using S@H.

      Fundamentally S@H needs to be able to load multiple work units all at once and then farm them out to a worker thread for every processor on the system. Having to go through the hassle of launching separate tasks from separate directories is tedious. I'm doing them a favor by running the client, at the least it should be as little hassle as possible for me devote every extra clock cycle to it. If they added such features it would only benefit them as they are more easily going to get more extra clock cycles chugging away at work units.

      Don't makestupid assumptions about people.

      ASS.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  22. The dish by hey · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure the Parkes dish was the one in the nice 2000 movie called The Dish.
    If you haven't seen it I bet, as a Slashdotter, you'd like it.

    1. Re:The dish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. It was. Even more exciting, the sheep are still there, and none of the hardware has been upgraded since 1969! The Australian Federal Government is reported to be considering an upgrade to the computers at Parkes to use those new-fangled transistor things. Apparently they've realised that punch-cards are not environmentally sustainable.

  23. Well by loraksus · · Score: 2

    At least seti@home seems to finally solved their bandwidth problem. I lack a heater in this particular part of the house so athlons must do, its nice that they will run toasty just in time for fall.
    I'm running most of my clients under 2k and stopped for a time because of the problems they were having. (writing hundreds of entries to event logs [oh no! we can't connect] is a really, really annoying thing)

    --
    1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
  24. Re:Parkes link by N+Monkey · · Score: 3, Interesting

    (does not mention SETI yet, at least not prominently)

    Perhaps not, but the link from that to the Long Baseline Array is quite interesting. There is a map of the array of telescopes - the spread is huge!

  25. Waste of time... by potcrackpot · · Score: 1

    Everyone knows that the aliens have amazing scientific know-how, and are thus invisible to our primitive technology.

    We don't have anything to worry about though; they'll just come to a planet that is two-thirds water (even though they have a severe allergy to it), and try and whup our butts in hand to hand inside of using their vaporizers.

    Death by plant spray.

    Least, that's what they said in Signs, anyway.

  26. Obligatory Beowulf Cluster Mention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But what about letting both sattelites run, you know - like a Beowulf Cluster of these.

  27. If they are gonna upgrade the software..... by Dynedain · · Score: 2

    How about adding in multiple threads? (besides seperating out the graphics of the screensaver)

    I have several dual-procs at my disposal that I like to run SETI@home on, but its an absolutely hideous chore to run and manage multiple instances of the client on the same machine.

    Oh, and is SETI@home trademarked? Is the YourCableCompanyHere@Home a violation? (I'd love to see SETI get a huge widfall settlement at the "big boys'" expense.

    --
    I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
    1. Re:If they are gonna upgrade the software..... by SETIGuy · · Score: 2, Informative
      Under BOINC there is more of a separation between the communications code and the data processing code. The data processing code is essentially a separate application controlled by the BOINC client

      The BOINC client will know how many CPUs you have, how many you are willing to use for processing, and what fraction of your CPU time you want to spend on each of the BOINC projects you have joined. Application binaries can be cryptographically signed to verify origin. BOINC will cache workunits by default, with disk usage limits set by the user. BOINC will support multiple servers. Donation credits will be based upon the amount of work done (FLOPs, int ops, network bandwidth, disk space, etc.) If one project runs out of data, or the servers go down, you machine will devote time to the other projects you've joined.

      We're really trying to address all of the lessons we learned throughout SETI@home. And, if there are some we missed, the server/client code is open source, and will be available on sourceforge. Project specific code can be open source or not as the people behind each project desire.

  28. MOD parent INTERESTING!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really outstanding observation and interesting point of a view!

  29. Grammar, man, grammar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Professor_Quail writes "Space.com reports that SETI@home is planning to transfer it's operations from Arecibo to another telescope in Australia, where they say lies an...
    The word is its, not it's. Come on, people.
    1. Re:Grammar, man, grammar by Raven42rac · · Score: 3, Informative

      The phrase "Come on, people." happens to be a sentence fragment. This is the /. message boards, not Harvard School of Law, the internet has always been a pretty casual environment, basically, if you know what someone means, it doesnt matter if they write like a Rhodes Scholar, or a layman. Lighten up a little, you will find yourself with lower blood pressure, and chicks will dig you.

      --
      I hate sigs.
    2. Re:Grammar, man, grammar by Crazieeman · · Score: 1

      But chicks apparently dig guys who try to define what the meaning of "is" is.

      So do we find some sort of happy medium?

    3. Re:Grammar, man, grammar by Deton8 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I think chicks dig men who know the difference between "it's" and "its", unlike the author of the original /. post. Now, trying to swerve this off-topic thread back into line, maybe it's time to develop artificial intelligence software here on Earth which knows its contractions and possessive pronouns. If you aggregate all the spare CPU cycles on all the computers on Earth, you might be able to assemble enough computing horsepower to correct all the improper uses of the word "it's" on the web. It could even be a screen saver, where you get to watch it crawl the web, hack to root, and correct web sites for people.

    4. Re:Grammar, man, grammar by sympleko · · Score: 1

      The phrase "Come on, people." happens to be a sentence fragment.

      There's nothing wrong with the sentence. The subject is you (understood), "people" is in the vocative case and is appositive to the subject, and the verb is "come on", which happens to be a
      phrasal verb.

      This is the /. message boards, not Harvard School of Law, the internet has always been a pretty casual environment, basically, ...


      Having known a few Harvard Law students, I think it's funny that you use them as examples of grammar experts. Moreover, in this sentence you string together three independent clauses with commas, which is a no-no.

      I was going to keep quiet (the internet being as you say a pretty casual environment), but I didn't like seeing the pot get modded up for calling the kettle black. I'll probably get modded down for doing the exact same thing.

    5. Re:Grammar, man, grammar by sharkman67 · · Score: 1

      Internet should have a capital 'I' not lowercase as in your post.

      Not that I am being picky...

    6. Re:Grammar, man, grammar by Raven42rac · · Score: 2

      Dude, let us just not get nitpicky, we don't need thread nazis on the /. message boards

      --
      I hate sigs.
    7. Re:Grammar, man, grammar by sympleko · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. Despite my crabbiness (not enough coffee, I guess) and apparent hypocrisy, I did agree with the spirit of your comment.

    8. Re:Grammar, man, grammar by Raven42rac · · Score: 2

      to echo one of my friends sentiments, there needs to be a new /. moderation, "tru dat", its ok, i get like that if i dont have enough code red

      --
      I hate sigs.
    9. Re:Grammar, man, grammar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me correct: I come on people.

  30. Re:Very interesting stuff today on slashdot by hplasm · · Score: 0

    BZZZZT!! Astronomers!! I win!!

    --
    ...and he grinned, like a fox eating shit out of a wire brush.
  31. Point that telescope this-a-way... by E-Rock-23 · · Score: 1

    I'm still trying to find intelligent life on Earth...

    Humor aside, I'm looking forward to this move. After 2618 hours spent plugging away at Arecibo's data, it'll be refreshing to get some new data to work with. I'm of the belief that the Universe is just too damned big for us to be that special in terms of intelligent life. With our galaxy as big as it is, not to mention other galaxies beyond it, it's hard to believe that we're all alone in the great void. Bring on the Aussie telescope's data!

    --
    Blog Prophyts - Right On, Man
    1. Re:Point that telescope this-a-way... by Crazieeman · · Score: 1

      2618? Nice, I'm up to 2794.

      However, I'm bringing several more systems online to work the data over as well, to give credit to myself =)

      I seriously can't wait to see the new Aussie telescope data, I spend a lot of time pouring over the data chunks I get out of Arecibo on my own, its really fascinating stuff.

    2. Re:Point that telescope this-a-way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm of the belief that the Universe is just too damned big for us to be that special in terms of intelligent life. With our galaxy as big as it is, not to mention other galaxies beyond it, it's hard to believe that we're all alone in the great void

      Yes I agree with you space is big very big.

      The number of planets likely to be able to support life has been roughly calculated and that's promising.

      Only two snags

      1) We have been intelligent for a tiny fration of the timeline of the plant, and in total when (ok if) probably won't be much of a fraction ofhte whole timeline. Then chances of this fraction of overall time co-inciding with another fraction on a distant plant is slim.

      2) Life doesn't always develop to be what we call intelligent, the dinosours were around for a very very long time.

      I personally hope there is and that the existence of extraterrestial intelligence finally nails the lid down on all the religion (read: adult comfort blanket) nonsense. That's my opinion, feel free to worship whatever you like (hey even ET why not)

      I think that if we discover them we should wait until we have no more wars and can get all along before contacting them, I personally would be embarrased to have to explain why we kill each other to ET

    3. Re:Point that telescope this-a-way... by BigBir3d · · Score: 2

      I am up to 32,132 hours. Without the help of a lab or mahines at work. Currently running on my g/f iMac (slooooooow) and her mom's Duron (take that Igor, I switched it again). I think I had it on 3 or 4 machines for a month or two, but that has been quite a while ago. Most of the data is available here, with pretty pics here.

  32. Re:So apparently, indeed! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Absolutely: Australia, where according to the article there is an increased chance to find extraterrestrials. I don't see why they didn't search in Australia to begin with. On second thought, perhaps they first had to hone their detection technology so that they can distinguish native Australians from the aliens. Yeah, that must be it.

  33. Too good a line to pass up by Observer · · Score: 5, Funny
    "...another telescope in Australia, where they say lies an increased chance of finding extra-terrestrials."
    Most of them will be called Bruce, presumably.
    1. Re:Too good a line to pass up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um... thats Michael Baldwin "bruce".

    2. Re:Too good a line to pass up by geekoid · · Score: 2

      alien "hello, we come in peace"
      Australian "mind if we call you bruce?"
      alien "fine, war it is"

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:Too good a line to pass up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno about extra-terrestrials, but they should find at least one alien lifeform - Tasmanians :-)

  34. The difference with SETI@home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One thing that makes me continue to run SETI@home instead of more "practical" applications like protein folding is the simple fact that SETI@home will not generate money for the originators of the project. The results of protein folding and AIDS research will ultimately result in some people getting filthy rich, and if they want that they can bloody well do the work themselves.

    1. Re:The difference with SETI@home by BaronVonDuvet · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they should offer some payment if someone happens to help find a cure for something. It's a bit strange that people are willing to help as long as someone else does not make a profit. Do people not donate to certain charities in case it results in someone finding a cure for something and they don't get any money back? Anyway, I'm sure the people at Seti@home would profit if they did find alien life. I run Seti@home but have absolutely no objections to possibly helping to cure disease.

    2. Re:The difference with SETI@home by Izeickl · · Score: 1

      I can see the point, but ultimately it makes me feel better knowing Folding/Genome@Home are producing useful data right now and providing a wealth of information to scientists. These are published in scientific journals, I belive, thus the group need not make money from any discoveries made by outside scientists using the data Folding/Genome collected. Space research is important, but I feel should be second place to the above as just now SETI is really just stabbing blindly in the dark hoping to find something.

    3. Re:The difference with SETI@home by Duncan3 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Folding@home out of Stanford and a couple other NON-commercial projects are doing very fundamental research, and will never "generate money" but do generate plenty of published research. But you're right that you do have to do your homework when picking what projects to do - you may just need to do a little more homework ;)

      --
      - Adam L. Beberg - The Cosm Project - http://www.mithral.com/
    4. Re:The difference with SETI@home by Rich0 · · Score: 1
      Calling a major university non-commercial is probably a bit of a stretch... Sure, they don't have shareholders - they have to sink their profits into salaries and bureaucrats - but that is probably the only major difference between them and a corporation.

      If a cure for cancer is discovered by a research institution, I'm almost certain that it would be patented, and the patent would be sold to an appropriate commercial operation to develop it. I'm not very familiar with the folding@home project, but I'd be surprised if there isn't a EULA to click on indicating that you acknowledge that you have no rights to any discoveries made using your CPU.

      I'm all for capitalism - but I'm not a big fan of corporate welfare. Capitalism is good for society precisely because it makes the costs of things plainly evident to everyone. Subsidizing a commercial outfit makes their product look cheaper than it really is. Same goes for big government spending - the costs are hidden in convoluted budgets. Pure corporate research is largely efficient simply because the company knows they can only charge so much for the final product.

      Don't get me wrong - I'm not completely opposed to government-sponsored basic research. However, it should be basic research and not development work that companies have an incentive to do themselves. Such spending should be peer-reviewed and should come out of well-defined budget line items, so such spending can be a matter of public debate. Generally speaking, directly patentable discoveries should be few and far between (we want BASIC research). I'd like to say that patentable discoveries should be made public domain - but unfortunately that just means that companies outside of the country that made a discovery can snatch it. If the citizens of France pony up a billion dollars for the cure for AIDS, it would only be fair to keep the profits from the discovery within the nation of France. Then again, I don't know how practical this is since most major corporations are essentially nations unto themselves - just because the company is listed on the NYSE doesn't mean that Americans have anything to do with manufacturing their products...

    5. Re:The difference with SETI@home by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wouldn't mind devoting some CPU cycles to protein folding, but last time I looked there were no Linux clients...

    6. Re:The difference with SETI@home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Must have been a while since you checked. Try going here (Stanford Folding@Home download page).

    7. Re:The difference with SETI@home by SparkyTWP · · Score: 1

      I wonder if you would be saying this if you had AIDS or cancer.

      Also, most, if not all, of the work done in these projects go to universities, so there's no real money to be made.

      And finally, there are some distributed projects like Ubero (http://ubero.com) that will pay you for your time if the solutions found by distributed computing lead to someone making a lot of money.

    8. Re:The difference with SETI@home by piku · · Score: 1

      Oh no, nobody would get rich of the discovery of extraterrestrial life...

    9. Re:The difference with SETI@home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fucking Folding Fags.

      seti@home could discover an alien race. Maybe they'll come down and dump buckets of money on us for discovering them. Or maybe curing aids for them is as easy as breathing in & out for us. Did you ever think of that?

      Yea, didn't think so fuckstick. I fucking hate it when Folding llamas join discussions about Seti. GTFO, go back to hardocp.

    10. Re:The difference with SETI@home by miguelitof · · Score: 2
      Perhaps they should offer some payment if someone happens to help find a cure for something. It's a bit strange that people are willing to help as long as someone else does not make a profit.

      Perhaps they should release the cures found to the public, patent-free, so that the discoveries benefit the entire human race, instead of one pharmaceutical firm?

      If they agreed to that, I would be right there helping them along.

      --
      --- Biffster.org
      "Bite my shiny metal ass."
    11. Re:The difference with SETI@home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The last time I checked, they still couldn't figure out how to compile a FreeBSD version. Sure, you could try to run it in compatibility mode, but you'll never be able to tag the downloaded core in time. It just downloads the core, tries to run, fails, downloads the core... ad infinitum. Or am I having crack dreams about Genome@home? It's been a while.

  35. Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope time? by PerryMason · · Score: 5, Interesting
    It strikes me as funny that we spend all this time and money looking for something that might exist when we could use the telescope time to search for near earth crossing (NEC) asteriods, which certainly do exist and represent a much greater potential danger than little green men.

    There are essentially no searches being carried out in the Southern hemisphere at the present after the Howard government in Australia chose to withdraw all funding back in 1996.

    In 1996 the Howard Government withdrew funding for Australia's only asteroid
    tracking research project at the Siding Springs observatory in central New
    South Wales. In 1994, the SA Government announced plans for a $140 million
    optical telescope at Freeling Heights in the Flinders Ranges and a $200
    million particle detector radio telescope near Woomera, but they were not
    built. [The Age 22/9/00]


    Maybe someone could look at an Asteroid@Home option as well?
    --
    "I'm tired of all this 'Aren't humanity great' bullshit. We're a virus with shoes" - Bill Hicks
  36. SETI is pointless, Aliens already here.... by BigAlexK · · Score: 0, Redundant


    What is the point in SETI?

    Certain parts of society are already liasing with aliens, and we have been for some time. Wake up and smell the coffee!

    Read:
    www.disclosureproject.com
    www.cseti.org
    www.seaspower.com

    Science needs to open its eyes, and take off the blinkers.

    1. Re:SETI is pointless, Aliens already here.... by N+Monkey · · Score: 3, Funny

      What is the point in SETI?

      Certain parts of society are already liasing with aliens, and we have been for some time. Wake up and smell the coffee! .....


      Yes and those documentaries, MIB and MIB2, were fascinating, weren't they?
      /me removes tongue from cheek...

    2. Re:SETI is pointless, Aliens already here.... by geekoid · · Score: 2

      haha that was funny, especially considering "The Matrix" was the real documentary. ;)

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  37. Not actually Parkes by Smoulderer · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Actually, it was the dish at nearby Honeysuckle Creek which actually received the transmissions from the first moon landing, but the directors of "The Dish" thought that the Parkes telescope looked better or made a better story, or something...

    Read a fairly accurate review of the movie.

    --
    /usr/bin/fortune favours the brave
    1. Re:Not actually Parkes by N+Monkey · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Damn! I'd forgotten that. Still I suppose it's not as bad as some of the changes made to "historical" movies - certain recent war movies spring to mind.

    2. Re:Not actually Parkes by jmauro · · Score: 2, Informative

      The both recieved transmissions from the first moon landing, but the dish at Huneysuckle Creek was not the right size to receive television pictures all that well. The first pictures were from Goldstone in California and Honeysuckle Creek, (switching between the two to find the best picture) but after Parkes came into view seven minutes into the broadcast, all the pictures came from Parkes.

    3. Re:Not actually Parkes by RedFive · · Score: 1

      Honeysuckle Creek's antennae was relocated in 1981 - its not there anymore

      --
      RedFive jedi_knight111@hotmail.com
    4. Re:Not actually Parkes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone else said, Honeysuckle Creek only did the first eight minutes or so before handing over to Parkes.

      It's not "nearby" in absolute terms btw; it's near Canberra around 250 km south of Parkes and about 20 km south of the Tidbinbilla DSTN station. The station has long since gone but apparently there is a memorial cairn there.

  38. If you don't give a heck to seti@home by Ilgaz · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you really don't believe in that project, you can do something would have more direct implications.

    go to http://www.intel.com/cure and pick UD (United Devices,founded by seti@home project guy) Cancer project.

    Phase 1 has ended, now they run Phase 2. Its running as IDLE process and no problems here. (runs non stop for 97 days here I read) Only for win32 though :(

    I mean nothing is more stupid than an idle processor 24/7 while it can help something.

    Oh btw, I am not against seti@home in anyway.

    1. Re:If you don't give a heck to seti@home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or stop by my distributed computing projects site and try one of the 53 other active projects.

  39. Re:Why? by SystematicPsycho · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    it's like those guys who try find a way to make a seedless watermelon.

    --
    Analytic & algebraic topology of locally Euclidean meterization of infinitely differentiable Riemmanian manifold
  40. State of open sourceness of the BOINC+plugins? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    > yes, it's open source, to be released under the Mozilla Public License

    Will the whole S@H part be also open source?

    This far it has been rather questionable why S@H has been closed source. The explanations given by S@H staff hasn't hold water as there has been presented a way how many of the benefits of open source in a security sense can be accomplished without being truly open source:


    http://www.geocities.com/usenet_j/vadcosl.html
    VADCOSL - Volunteer Assisted Distributed Computing Open Source License

    I remember lenghtly debate about the issue in USENET few months ago.

  41. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by Stephen+VanDahm · · Score: 3, Interesting

    While I understand the need to search for near-earth asternoids (the extinction of the human species doesn't appeal to me), there should be some resources reserved for projects like SETI. In retrospect, when we think of the greatest achivements of science, more often than not we think of the advances that changed, in a fundamental way, our understanding of the natural world. I don't see how knowing that the earth orbits the sun rather than the other way around made anyone's life better at the time, but the proof of this ranks as one of the greatest achievements in human history because it revolutionized the way we thought about God, ourselves, and the world we live in.

    I think that the discovery of an extraterrestial civilization would be an achievement on par with the proof of heliocentrism. Knowing that there are civilizations on other planets would have no immediate practical consequences (we wouldn't be able to travel to their planet and meet them), but the knowledge that we aren't the only civilized species would radically alter the way that we think about the world, especially in terms of theology and metaphysics.

    What I, in my ignorance, consider to be a waste of resources is the development of new elements. This is something that has no practical value and no effect on our worldview. Creating new elements in particle accelerators must be very, very expensive, and the finished product only lasts for a short period of time. Even if they found that, somewhere down the line, element 315 is stable, it wouldn't matter because they're making these things one atom at a time. If element 315 had an atomic mass of 700, they'd have to produce something like 8x10^20 atoms just to get a gram of it. I vote that we take their grant money and use it to search for near-earth asteroids.

    Steve

  42. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by Celandine · · Score: 1

    Whether or not it would be a better use of time, you can't use a general-purpose radio telescope for this sort of work. The best approach is a network of small optical telescopes like those run by Spacewatch. Since the data reduction process there is pretty straightforward, I doubt there'd be a need for an @home project.

  43. Optimizations by Perdo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Take a clue from KLAT2

    "KLAT2's 80/64-bit double-precision performance is around 22.8 GFLOPS, a very respectable number. Then again, using 3DNow!, KLAT2's single-precision ScaLAPACK performance zips to over 64 GFLOPS"

    Optimize clients for different architectures. MMX, 3Dnow!, SSE, SSE2, Altivec, Hyper threading, x86-64 etc.

    Might be nice to jump from 50 Tflops/s to 150/s just by using processor specific instructions.

    Since the client will be open source, users may try it anyway but perhaps SETI could offer some kind of contest to insure the code gets audited properly.

    For programmers out there, imagine placing "Optimized code for the largest distributed computing project in the world, resulting in a threefold increase in performance" in your resume.

    Being personally responsible for adding 100 Tflop/s to seti@home beats the hell out of running clients on a few idle machines.

    --

    If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    1. Re:Optimizations by YottaMatt · · Score: 1
      some kind of contest to insure the code

      I need to hold more contests to insure my stuff.

      Whomever pulls the lucky ticket gets me to pay them $50 a year, but have to pay me $200 000 when I lose my hair.

  44. Multibeam reciever by tconnors · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I notice that they will make use of the multibeam receiver to get effectively a 13 times increase in stuff they can look at at one time.

    I wouldn't think this would be terribly useful. When you go up into the focus cabin, and realise the 13 recievers are separated by not more than about 40cm (the dish is 64 metres across) - ie, you are looking at an area of the sky about .5 degrees across (quick back of the envelope calculation there, so to speak). What in the sky is within .5 degrees? Globular clusters and the centre of the milyway galaxy (or indeed, other galaxies). You won't find life in globular clusters, because there are simply far too many stars too close together, and life would be cooked. Same thing for the centre of our our galaxy. And since you can only see entire globular clusters or supernova in other galaxies, I refuse to believe any civilasation could produce more radiation than a supernova, so we won't be able to see anything that far out!

    Not to mention I really hate seeing such a useful instrument such as the multibeam receiver wasted on such a useless task as SETI, but they are probably (hopefully) only piggy backing on the electrons going to other experiments. :)

    1. Re:Multibeam reciever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The advantage of a multibeam setup is noise rejection. If you pick up the same signal on more than one reciever at once, you can be certain that's not the signal you are looking for.

      If you pick it up on one, move the dish to put another beampath on the signal, and it's still there, it's a clear sign that you aren't looking at a terrestrial signal (or problems in the reciever.)

    2. Re:Multibeam reciever by tconnors · · Score: 1

      The advantage of a multibeam setup is noise rejection. If you pick up the same signal on more than one reciever at once, you can be certain that's not the signal you are looking for.

      If you pick it up on one, move the dish to put another beampath on the signal, and it's still there, it's a clear sign that you aren't looking at a terrestrial signal (or problems in the reciever.)


      Duh. Didn't think of that one - thanks :)

    3. Re:Multibeam reciever by pomakis · · Score: 4, Informative

      The main advantage of using a multibeam receiver, as stated in the article, is to filter out noise from the Earth. If the same signal is received from different points in the sky (even if they're only slightly different), then it's almost definitely a signal that originated on Earth and is simply bouncing off the atmosphere. Being able to filter out false positives like this is extremely advantageous to the SETI program.

    4. Re:Multibeam reciever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...I refuse to believe any civilasation could produce more radiation than a supernova, so we won't be able to see anything that far out!

      Ah, but perhaps the supernova is the message!

      Might I suggest you read Infinity Beach, by Jack McDevitt, ISBN 0-06-102005-2? In it, as one final stab at saying "Here we are!," the Seabright Institute undertakes the Beacon project, which is a series of artifical supernovae, IIRC spaced 60 days apart. Just a small part of the story, but cool none the less.
  45. Um..maybe not powerful... by Netdoctor · · Score: 2, Informative
    The Australian telescope is more powerful, with a wider view of the sky

    Okay, picky picky this one, but I think you mean more sensitive. We're not blasting the aliens with Ricky Martin (maybe they didn't like that, hence the move), we're listening here.

    Bigger dishes and arrays have the advantage of higher signal gain and different far field patterns (listening area shapes).

    You gotta have more gain to overcome loss of signal due to air, noisy equipment, and the like. You don't get many choices on moving a dish the size of a small town really, so you gotta move.

    Dan N7NMD/9W2DU

  46. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by PerryMason · · Score: 1

    The Asteroids@Home bit was more of a quip at the end than a serious idea. I was talking more about the use of the telescope time, but as the poster above and yourself mentioned, a radio telescope isnt the right tool for the task, so its pretty much a moot point.

    I just get pissed off at how issues as large as the failure to search for civilisation desroyers get forgotten as easy as they do. Oh well, its not like we'd leave anyone grieving the loss of humankind.

    --
    "I'm tired of all this 'Aren't humanity great' bullshit. We're a virus with shoes" - Bill Hicks
  47. Aliens down under? by Steve+Franklin · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    "...in Australia, where they say lies an increased chance of finding extra-terrestrials."

    I haven't been following the UFO press lately. Has there been a spate of sightings in the Outback?

    On a more serious note, are these characters saying that there are more advanced stellar civilizations in the southern sky than the northern sky? One shudders at the contorted logic and statistical analysis that could have led to such a conclusion.

    --
    Hic iacet Arthurus, rex quondam rexque futurus.
    1. Re:Aliens down under? by N+Monkey · · Score: 4, Informative

      On a more serious note, are these characters saying that there are more advanced stellar civilizations in the southern sky than the northern sky? One shudders at the contorted logic and statistical analysis that could have led to such a conclusion.

      It's a perfectly logical conclusion if you've ever looked into the night sky in the southern hemisphere. A larger amount of the milkyway is visible from "Down Under" and, given the relative proximity of our own galaxy's stars, it would seem a better set of candidates.

      Simon

    2. Re:Aliens down under? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come on now, everyone knows that the only aliens worth encountering are ones visible from the Northern hemisphere. Southern aliens would be savages, barely able to appreciate a nice cup of tea...

    3. Re:Aliens down under? by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      I think you'll probably find most of Australia's aliens on the Federal Government's front benches :-)

    4. Re:Aliens down under? by Steve+Franklin · · Score: 2

      Since neither Australia nor Puerto Rico is at the pole, there is a considerable amount of overlap between the two locations in terms of the part of the sky that is visible at some time during the year. The ideal spot would be on the equator, but both locations are close enough to make the comparison far less than mutually exclusive.

      As for subjective viewings of the sky, I fail to see what this has to do with anything, since it has more to do with local conditions than latitude. I would suspect that the best place to search the sky would be in the mountains of Equador. Might even be a better place to bump into aliens, considering its distance from the beaten path. ;-)

      As for star densities, I would imagine that the type of stars would be much more suggestive than their density. And on a purely statistical level, the significance of the visible density of the Milky Way at any particular spot on Earth pales in comparison to the star density close to Earth, since even most of the Milky Way is too far away to be of much interest. In this particular instance, "closer" doesn't mean the same thing as "close."

      I would suggest that the most practical approach to this type of exploration would be to concentrate the limited resources on a few nearby stars, beginning with Alpha Centauri, and forgetting about stars whose current condition won't be visible to us until our civilization has long since died or migrated. There's also a purely practical reason for this approach. An inhabited planet orbiting in the binary Alpha Centauri system could conceivably be a real threat to us at some point. The farther away, the less there is to worry about. The greatest threat would be someone inhabiting the outer reaches of our own solar system.

      --
      Hic iacet Arthurus, rex quondam rexque futurus.
    5. Re:Aliens down under? by Scott+Ransom · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but as a professional astronomer (and a regular user of both Arecibo and Parkes), I have to point out that you are off base on most of your comments...

      1. Australia is a much better location for SETI since it can see many more stars in the Milky Way than Arecibo can in Puerto Rico -- and for longer portions of time during a day and during the year as a whole. Since the plane of the Milky Way is not aligned with the Earth's equator, an observatory on the equator is _not_ optimal.

      2. Local conditions have very little to do with SETI in this radio band (20cm). Observations can be made any time of day -- and even in the middle of thunder storms (although, yes, nearby lightning _does_ add some interference).

      3. The stellar density near the Earth is relatively low when looking at the Milky Way as a whole. We live, essentially, on a nice quite side street in the 'burbs.

      4. If we don't want to make too many assumptions about where ET is, the best bet is to cover the largest number of stars possible. Since more stars can be seen (because there are _many_ more there) from the southern hemisphere, you have a higher probability of finding ET down there.

      As a side note, this is one of the other reasons why the multiple beam thing is so important. You cover 13 times more sky (and therefore 13 times more stars) at a time (or conversely, you can sit on any individual point in the sky 13 times longer without wasting valuable telescope time).

      Scott

  48. Stared? by cat_jesus · · Score: 2

    Can you really say that a telescope stares? Perhaps because it typically is fixed, but it is a tool so it doesn't really look. It just allows us to look.

  49. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by AndroidCat · · Score: 1, Funny

    We're decoding the message fron the aliens now sir. They say "Watch .. Out .. For .. That .. Asteroi--"...

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  50. Oops... spelling mistake ruins joke by N+Monkey · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Meant to write "starred" not "stared".

    /me goes off to sit in the corner wearing the dunces cap.

  51. Idle processor by Tim+Ward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I mean nothing is more stupid than an idle processor 24/7 while it can help something.

    So turn the f***ing thing off if you're not using it!! Haven't you heard of global warming? Let me guess, you're American, right?

    1. Re:Idle processor by assmeat · · Score: 0

      I once read that if one were to calculate the total energy "wasted" on the seti@home project, it would add up to an amount roughly equivalent to the amount of energy consumed in a day in the UK boiling water for tea. F***ing Brit.

    2. Re:Idle processor by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      Have you ever heard of P2P? Its my only answer to it... 24/7 connection?

      And no, I am not an American.

    3. Re:Idle processor by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      oh I forgot something too... You don't get a heck about what IDLE processing time I speak about.

      E.g. IBM Grid computing... Big blue spends billions to that research.

      While I reply needlessly to your comment, UD Ligandfit tries to find a cure to cancer at background, without effecting anything. It runs while my system is ON. I don'T turn ON my system for it. Big difference.

      You can run it as a screensaver only too... Instead of seeing stupid Direct3d or photo etc tricks, you can see ACTUAL stuff (latest displays OpenGL model of the molecule being processed) and do REAL help to Oxford university trying to find a cure to cancer via distrubuted computing.

  52. Re:Why? by gatkinso · · Score: 0

    The aliens will provide all the answers - or blow us up!

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  53. Comparing radio telescopes by davecl · · Score: 3

    Calling Parkes mroe 'powerful' than Arecibo is somewhat confusing. Arecibo actually has a much larger disk, so it can detect fainter sources (one definition of powerful). However, it gets this collecting area at the expense of being unable to steer, while Parkes can point all over the sky. The other issue is the multibeam receiver. Parkes with multibeam can observe 13 positions at once, while Arecibo is constrained to one. In this sense Parkes could be said to be 13 times as powerful as Arecibo.

    It should be noted that there is also a multibeam receiver at Jodrell Bank near Manchester. I'm not sure if this has been involved with any SETI observations.

    As to going to the south, an earlier SETI search by META found a few signals that might've been of artificial origin, but these did not repeat, so were not cast iron SETI candidates. Intrigingly, these sources clustered along the Galactic Plane. By moving the search to the south, SETI will be able to see far more galactic stars. The reference for this is: Horowitz and Sagan, 1993, Astrophysical Journal vol. 415 p.218.

    1. Re:Comparing radio telescopes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excellent fucking work. I'm not kidding here. It's rather fucking impressive when you actually support your work with citation. I like the way you do business.

    2. Re:Comparing radio telescopes by mmacdona86 · · Score: 1

      I meant to mod this one up.

  54. Software Upgrade by technomancerX · · Score: 2

    How about a version of the OS X screen saver that doesn't crash the machine? My iBook reboots randomly while running it and a buddy of mine's dual CPU tower has random lockups with the client.

    --
    .technomancer
  55. While we search for aliens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    That may or may not exist, we have asteroids that DO exist that present a threat.....

    I say all this scanning of the skies could be put to equal if not greater use by developing a distributed computing client that scans the skies for possible asteroids that may pose a threat.

  56. It's operations? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > SETI@home is planning to transfer it's operations

    Transfer it is operations? Really?

    Slashdot, where illiteracy is valued above anything else.

    1. Re:It's operations? by Raven42rac · · Score: 2

      slashdot, home of the thread nazis

      --
      I hate sigs.
  57. Move to Australia? by haa...jesus+christ · · Score: 1

    I presume they'll be looking for prison planets from now on?

    oh c'mon, laugh.

  58. 4 Million Users by Pedrito · · Score: 2

    I haven't read all the comments, so someone may have pointed this out, but SETI@Home hit 4 million users yesterday. Pretty impressive.

  59. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This search doesn't "waste" any time on the ohserving telescope. The SETI@Home instruments ride piggyback on the telescope, and don't get to choose were the telescope is pointed at. Instead, they look at whatever part of the sky other scientists are observing.

    In the case of the Parkes observatory, much of the time is spent looking for pulsars. SETI@Home won't detract from that at all. It will just take more data "in parallel."

  60. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by LiRM35 · · Score: 1

    I'm not aware that any asteroids, earth-crossing or not, have radio signatures. Optical telescopes are needed for asteroid searches...

  61. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interestingly enough, it is possible to develop an internally consistent cosmology that does have the Earth at its center, with the Sun and the rest of the planets orbiting us. It is based on a model initially proposed by the astronomer Tycho Brahe. I don't blame you for not knowing this since it seems that they won't teach it in schools (now there's a surprise!) but at the very least you should not be so quick to claim that heliocentristicism has been "proven."

  62. SETI's Radio telescopes! What a waste of time! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't they know aliens use Sub-Space to communicate?!

  63. SETI client requests by tekrat · · Score: 1

    Dear Seti;

    I hope you're reading this. I'd like a greater variety of clients, and preferably, more command line clients. I don't want to waste CPU cycles generating a pretty screensaver on my PC or Mac, I want to fly through work units.

    Secondly, I believe that some time ago (around version 3) you DROPPED support for Sparc Linux, which cut the number of machines I can devote to SETI in half. I believe I have 1 Mac, 2 Windows machines and 1 Intel Linux machine still working on SETI (I have about 9500 work units done), but, if the Sparc Linux client returned, I could double the number of machines I have doing SETI.

    Also, please make them stand-alone clients, and not dependent upon a library I may or may not have. Download time of the client isn't a factor, getting it to run, and run easily is the goal.

    Thanks!

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
    1. Re:SETI client requests by xpurple · · Score: 1

      They dropped the NetBSD 68k client a while back. This limits my ability as well :(

      --
      http://www.xpurple.com
  64. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by tekrat · · Score: 1

    Don't worry about it.

    AFTER the big rock falls out of the sky and kills almost everyone, Congress will propose a bill that will enact a subcommitte to discuss the solution.

    Assuming bipartisan agreement, it should only take a few millenia after that to arrive at possible defense, which will be to bomb Iraq, or jail hackers, or something similar to the DCMA, but for asteroids....

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
  65. Wow. by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 2

    Now they'll find even more nothing.

    - A.P.

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
    1. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Twice as fast!

  66. Sounds good, but by Repugnant_Shit · · Score: 1

    From the article:

    > BOINC, in essence, is "a new layer of software" that separates the different components of the SETI@home program. It will allow changes to be installed without interrupting the screensaver or asking the user to download upgrades.

    Hopefully this will be an option, and not a requirement.

  67. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by Maxwell'sSilverLART · · Score: 1
    Creating new elements in particle accelerators must be very, very expensive, and the finished product only lasts for a short period of time. Even if they found that, somewhere down the line, element 315 is stable, it wouldn't matter because they're making these things one atom at a time. If element 315 had an atomic mass of 700, they'd have to produce something like 8x10^20 atoms just to get a gram of it. I vote that we take their grant money and use it to search for near-earth asteroids.

    Creating new elements in particle accelerators does alter the way we (well, physicists) think about the world. Creating trans-Uranic elements gives physicists insight into the atomic structure, how atoms are built, what keeps them together. Indeed, the creation (and destruction--how they fall apart is just as important as how they're built) of new elements provides data that are used to shape the most fundamental models of the universe; quantum theory and other such things are derived, in part, from such data.

    Additionally, some of those elements do have a practical use; perhaps you've heard of a synthetic element called Plutonium?

    --
    Moderate drunk! It's more fun that way!
  68. aliens in NEC? by peter303 · · Score: 2

    Thats the theme of Clarke's "Rendevous with Rama" series, about to become a movie. 'Kill two birds with one stone' then :-)

  69. different kinds of telescopes by peter303 · · Score: 2

    SETI radio while NEC is visual. These would use different existing telescopes. They would compete for operational funding, though.

  70. What if... by SuperKendall · · Score: 2

    Aliens are trying to communicate with us via vibrations sent through element 315 via Quantum means?

    Of course that is all just off the cuff nonsense science, but even so who's to say that other branches of science might not yield proof of extraterrestrial existance before radio telescopes?

    As for hunting for NEO objects, I daringly propose that everyone on welfare be sent to orbiting satellites to man searching stations, and the whole welfare fund from every country used to build and maintain these stations. Then the people have some good marketable skills when they rotate off duty in a few years.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  71. Slightly related offtopic... by flogger · · Score: 2, Interesting

    CNN is carrying a small article titled, "New telescope as big as Earth itself" about radio telecopes that cover 3 continents and work in unison to peer at the galaxy. If yer interested... read on.

    --
    ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
    "First things first -- but not necessarily in that order"
    -- The Doctor, "Doctor
    1. Re:Slightly related offtopic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'peer'... haha, that's rich!

  72. Re:Stared? No, starred! by sapped · · Score: 1

    Sadly, due to the constant eroding of such invaluable skills, like... say spelling for example, this one slipped by. What the original poster meant to say was that it starred in the movie (i.e. it played a role) as opposed to it staring in the movie. (i.e. looking at something with a fixed gaze.) Feel free to look them up in dictionary.com for better definitions, but you get the idea.

  73. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by Stephen+VanDahm · · Score: 2

    "it is possible to develop an internally consistent cosmology that does have the Earth at its center, with the Sun and the rest of the planets orbiting us. It is based on a model initially proposed by the astronomer Tycho Brahe."

    They teach Tycho Brahe's system in school, but you have to take a college astronomy course to hear about it. Brahe had access to the best empirical data that could be gathered with the naked eye (he collected it himself). This was the data that Kepler used to formulate his view that planets orbit in elipses rather than circles. But since Brahe didn't have access to telescopes, his data still wasn't all that great.

    The advent of telescopes made it possible to collect data that was even better than what Brahe had collected. Once you have telescopes, you have the ability to see the shadows that the sun casts on planets as they (or the sun, if that makes you happy) move around. I forget the exact situation, but someone was able to observe a shadow that, due to the angles involved, was impossible in a geocentric system, even in Brahe's.

    Though Brahe's system failed, I heard from a retired math professor that you can construct a complete mathematical model of planetary movement by assuming that, instead of living on the surface of a sphere, we live on the inside of a sphere, with the sun at the center. I don't know anything about this, though, and can't explain how or if it works.

    Steve

  74. BOINC's upgrades will download automatically by Sigfried_Blip · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What are they thinking?

    WARNING: Upgrades that download automatically without any user intervention? Have they gone "BOINCers?" This is a very bad idea that will create an enormous security hole. My prediction is that most businesses that currently allow seti@home will ban the new BOINC system.

    Do we really need another generic distributed computing platform like the failed or failing Popular Power, Process Tree, Entropia, Parabon, and Distributed Science?

  75. other end of the scope by Tablizer · · Score: 2, Funny

    Perhaps instead we should upgrade the aliens to make them easier to detect.

  76. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by Stephen+VanDahm · · Score: 2

    In my previous post, I admitted to being not very familiar with the creation or destruction of new elements, and now that you mention it, I see some value in the pursuit. But scientists (and all academics) have a tendency to research only the things that interest them and to publish the results only to their academic peers. The fruits of the research never leave the Ivory Tower.

    This is fine if the scholars are going to pay for everything themselves, but if they use scarce public resources to conduct their research, they have a responsibility to give back to the public. It doesn't need to be a marketable or practical payback, but real people in the real world ought to wiser as a result of the work that scholars do.

    Scientists are actually pretty good about giving back, but the current state of some disciplines is just disgraceful. Philosphers, for example, seem to have totally abandoned their responsibility to the public that funds their research.

    Steve

  77. SETI@home has lost focus. Here is a new idea. by Sigfried_Blip · · Score: 1

    I am worried that the seti@home project has lost its focus and gone astray. Seti@home was a romantic notion that captured the hearts and minds^h^h^h^h^h of many of it's users. Mindshare YES, brain power NO.

    I think seti@home should transform itself from being a passive project to being an active project. Utilizing the spare CPU cycles of a million idle computers is great but utilizing the millions of idle minds that stare at the screen-saver is revolutionary. Imagine the computing potential. It's incredible.

    I know the Seti League's project Argus is a volunteer effort, but unfortunately most of us don't have the space, money, skill, or time required to build a seti microwave station in our own backyard.

    My idea is to collect high quality microwave data from antennas such as Arecibo and Parkes and distribute that to users over the internet. Instead of (or in parallel to) a seti@program client, the user would use a signal analysis tool such as baudline to search for drifting signals. Search strategies would need to be conceived and programmed. A collaborative component would need to be built to allow IM like communication, second opinions, and instant peer review. It would be true distributed science that anyone with a creative mind and a computer could participate in.

    Since baudline can read and decode the seti@home work_unit.sah files you can perform your own secondary analysis of the seti@home data. Baudline is free but it only runs on x86 linux so give it a try if you can. Most WU data files appear to be pure noise and are boring to look at but occasionally you get an interesting one. Auto-drift rulez.

    The ukentucky link below a similar concept that is rough and needs more polish. The potential is there but the implementation is flawed. It also needs more volunteers.

  78. SETI can't work by SiliconEntity · · Score: 3, Informative

    If advanced alien civilizations existed in numbers significant enough for us to hear their radio transmissions, the probability is overwhelming that at least one in a nearby galaxy would have embarked on a program of colonization. Evolution favors organisms which have a drive to expand (otherwise they would have been out-competed). Technological civilizations inherit their evolutionary drives and will share this expansionist tendency.

    Expansion can be performed at a significant fraction of the speed of light. von Neumann machines - self-replicating, nanotech-based robotic spacecraft - can fly to a new system, make copies for exploration and colonization, and more copies which get sent off to other stars, all using local system resources. An entire galaxy or even group of galaxies can be explored and colonized at perhaps a tenth the speed of light. A million years will be enough to cover all the stars in a galaxy; a few times that will cover the local group of galaxies.

    Once a solar system is inhabited by a technological civilization, its most important goal will be to manage the primary resource, the energy production of the central star. Stars in unmodified systems radiate 99+% of their energy wastefully into empty space. A civilization will want to capture that energy and put it to work, by building a Dyson sphere or some similar structures to collect the wasted light and heat from the star. Star systems inhabited by advanced civilizations will look very different from the ones we see in our galaxy.

    The galaxy is ten billion years old. Our technological culture is no more than a few thousand years old. If other technological species have arisen, chances are statistically overwhelming that they are at least tens or hundreds of millions of years ahead of us. This means that they will have had ample time to fully explore, colonize and even modify the entire galaxy.

    The only plausible way this can't happen is if there are no other technological civilizations out there. And in that case, SETI won't work, we won't find any signals. That's the only reasonable conclusion we can draw from the fact that we live in a galaxy unmodified by technology.

    If the galaxy were so full of advanced life that SETI would work, they'd be here, and everywhere else in the galaxy, by now. Therefore SETI can't work.

    1. Re:SETI can't work by HuguesT · · Score: 2, Interesting

      OK, this is Fermi's well know argument (where are they?)

      There are a lot of assumptions in what you are writing, that's fine. The difference between simple assumptions and science is that with science you do check them.

      Maybe the aliens are indeed here? maybe they are observing us? maybe interstellar space travel is completely infeasible? maybe each and every civilisation that has even arisen in the galaxy has destroyed itself (we're not far from that ourselves)? Maybe aliens have conquered the whole galaxy and grown bored with it (now they're just having fun in some virtual world)?

      There are so many things that may have happened or never happened that it is worth it to check our assumptions. Maybe you are right, but it does not cost much money to check. This is what SETI is all about.

  79. Statistics: The Second Great Evil by perrin5 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Statistics?

    When anyone starts talking statistics when referencing outer space, I just have to cringe. So, let me get this straight, just so I understand your argument.

    1) aliens who use radio waves must be technologically advanced.
    2) Technologically advanced aliens would expand to other planets (why? what if they cannot handle weightlessness, what if they don't WANT to?)
    3) Said expansion would use relativistic speeds at all times to expand

    ergo: We would not recieve signals much before we recieved aliens.

    Now, let's look at a simple argument against your _Very_ loose logic.

    1) Space is three dimensional. Even assuming your "expansion" theory is correct, you must assume either (a) the species multiplies as fast as they expand radially outward (so that the population density is large enough that they will run into us eventually, as their expansion reaches us.

    or (b) they are targeting us as a direction to move towards. Personally, I don't find any plausibility to either of these arguments.

    2) You assume that since it only took us several thousand years to get where we are, there would HAVE to be species that evolved before us. There is no proof, anecdotal or otherwise that we, as a species are either late or early comers to the scene. I am resonably sure that to be able to withstand the change needed to create technology, some form of advanced, multi-cellular organism would be required. This requires a long process of evolution, assuming you believe in such.

    There are other problems, I won't go into them now....

    --
    hmmmm?
    1. Re:Statistics: The Second Great Evil by geekoid · · Score: 1, Redundant

      hehe good show.

      in short:
      "here are some statistics I made up, about an area of knowledge I know very little about, and a piece of 'logic' with no basis in fact that prove what they are doing won't work." ;)

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Statistics: The Second Great Evil by Noren · · Score: 2, Insightful
      First, a brief comment on the OP: von Neumann machines need not be nanotech based nor spacecraft- the definition and primary characteristic is self-duplication. The other two would facilitate the tasks you have in mind, admittedly.

      Perrin5, I think you're missing part of his point. He projects that a healthy spacefaring race would colonize the galaxy in a million years. This part is arguable, but if humans eventually do this that seems to me to be a reasonable estimate of the length of time required.

      As to your specifics:

      1a. I find completely plausable. Radial expansion at a constant rate is a much shallower growth curve than an exponential! Suppose that humans radically slow our population growth, so much so that the population requires 100 years to double itself. Multiplying our current population by 100 billion (very roughly the number of stars in the galaxy) would take less than 4000 years. I expect that humans (and Alien species X) would not have a problem of not enough population growth. This also could be the expected motive for Alien species X to expand.

      2. You completely miss the point, he assumed no such thing. He merely pointed out that given a rough million year timeframe to encompass the galaxy, an unknown civilization would have to be very very recent by galactic time standards for them not to already be here. If you believe his expansion timescale, the first species to achieve spacefaring colonization would be overwhelmingly likely take over the whole galaxy; it would require a huge coincidence for two species to start expanding at times close enough to overlap, given how quickly the takeover is expected to take on a galactic timescale.

  80. Great, fresh data by DrewK · · Score: 2, Informative

    About time, recently restarted seti@home after a lengthy absence and the work units were dated 1999. While the project is interesting, who wants to re-analyze 3 year old data for the 1000th time.

  81. Common sense, really. by geekoid · · Score: 2

    to paraphrase Dr. Frink:
    "which is obvious to even the most dimwitted individual that holds a phd in adavanced astronomy."

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  82. seti daemon script by darkonc · · Score: 2
    crontab entry:
    25 * * * * /home/samuel/seti/start-seti

    _____________
    runs the start-seti program hourly (start-seti checks for duplicates before going further)

    start-seti:
    #!/bin/bash
    cd ~samuel/seti
    if ! ps auxw | grep setiathome | grep --quiet -v grep
    then

    • ./setiathome -graphics -email -nice 20 >> seti.log
    fi

    _____________________
    Note that standard error is not redirected. If something goes wrong, stderr output gets mailed to me by cron.

    If seti@home starts with BOINC auto-loading programs, I'd be inclined to run this under a sandbox account (if I run it at all).

    --
    Sometimes boldness is in fashion. Sometimes only the brave will be bold.
  83. More than that by HuguesT · · Score: 1

    You sure about 100W? - a P-IV 2GHz consumes 75W by itself - a single HD consumes 12W when idle see Tom's hardware for reference. The motherboard is not innocuous and neither are the RAM or the video card. You don't have to run 3D for the GPU to run hot. Then there's all these fans. My guess it that the computer probably consumes at least 150W when running 100% CPU without disk access with recent CPUs from either Intel or AMD. Now I need to read out on switching PSU like you say. What is their efficiency? They seem to require cooling as well (fans) so it can't be 100%. To me 200-250W seems very reasonable as a consumption starting point when running S@H. Certainly recent PCs are quite good at heating a living room. And even if you are right (100W) that's still over $100/y, not an altogether negligible sum. Maybe you can laugh about it but I don't.

  84. Re:Wouldn't this be a better use for telescope tim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would you, in fact, feel better knowing that in 3 months an asteroid large enough to destroy 98% of all life would collide with Earth? Or would you prefer to spend your last few months, blissfully ignorant, while you watch the really cool SETI@Home screen saver?

  85. Correct yourself - SETI "*might not* work" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What civilization in its right mind would create von Neumann machines? How could any biological civilization decide creating von Neumann machines is in its best interest?

    As for biological beings go: I think it's quite possible that, as a general rule, civilizations are forced to find a solution to overpopulation or go extinct/collapse into "dark ages." The use of medicine to unnaturally prolong the average lifespan is probably a natural priority of any biological civilization. The population would grow faster than the species had evolved to handle. But this medical revolution, as in humans, is probably technologically easier than interstellar expansion. Thus they would be faced with the overpopulation problem before they can consider exponential colonization as a solution. If they don't solve the problem, they go extinct or their civilization collapses and slowly rebuilds until it's faced with the problem again. If they do solve the problem, they can continue to technologically advance, but no longer have a need to expand their territory.

    The people at SETI are obviously aware of the pardox you've mentioned, and they obviously realize that it is a valid concern but not a definitive negation of the possibility of life elsewhere. Say SETI "might not work" for these reasons and you're right. Say SETI "can't work" and you're a fool.