CERN, the Big Bang and Impact On the IT Industry
whencanistop writes "ComputerWeekly have put together a nice short guide (with lots of links) of what is going on at CERN. They've got a nice slant though on what this big bang experiment is going to mean for the IT Industry. Interesting slant on the world's largest grid and the database clustering technology that they are using. They have also picked up on the amusing rap video by CERN's scientists that has been wandering around YouTube."
Mad scientists are way too nice and sweet-natured these days. We need more evil geniuses. Who'll do things like run the Large Hardon Collider on Vista.
(Okay, that's too evil. They can run it on Google Chrome.)
http://rocknerd.co.uk
What a sweet posting that would be. "OK people, we need another Terawatt of power, let's kick in the batteries!"
http://www.gibby.net.au
a massive Linux-based storage system supplying many terrabytes of disk storage
Clearly the effect of being buried 100m underground.
The state you are in while your HEAD is detached... - wait, what?
10 Gigabit Wan
I'll be in my bunk
The video is too funny - and very well done. Send a link to your kids and they'll finally understand what CERN and LHC do. Maybe we should do more science education like this.
No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
Here's the short, short version: NOTHING.
Yes, there are lots of computers in use, but is there anything particularly unusual going on here or an brand new way of organizing IT? No? OK, then.
"the amusing rap video by CERN's scientists that hase been wandering around Youtube."
I hase a seekrut!
Is there some kind of unwritten law that states: "the more advanced the subject, the more retarded the writing has to be?"
I can't wait for the day where a small portion of our population's work day will consist of sitting in a leather chair in a ship and saying "Weapons to maximum"
Look at it this way: if they fail to find the God particle, at least they can make a really affordable subway system.
Full Tilt
Botanist sues to stop CERN hurling Earth into parallel universe
Boffinry bitchslap brouhaha: Higgs and Hawking head to head.
...and they also answer important questions, like So, what's the velocity of a sheep in a vacuum? Plus, the size of Wales in cubic furlongs
...anyway, getting back on topic, they also tell us, in Today is not Hadron Collider Day,
"Only a year or more from now will the colliding protons be disintegrated with sufficient violence to produce the various treats we have been promised. Strangely perhaps, by then it seems a racing cert that the broadcasters will all have gone home, and the scribblers will mostly have ceased to file copy. Once the insane laughs begin to truly ring out in the LHC's underground caverns, once the mad scientists wipe the foam from their lips, roll up their sleeves, lock and load their outrageous particle guns and really start to show what they can do, the chances are that nobody will be watching.
"But there will be at least one exception. The Reg hereby pledges to stay on the story, bringing you all the humonguous subterranean cavern magno-doughnut beam cannon news hot off the wires - perhaps with a garnish of hysterical rip-in-the-very-fabric-of-spacetime dimension portal angle here and there. As long as there's a universe to report from, we will continue to follow the Quest for the Big Answers (TM)"
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
(Apparently it was originally "goddammned particle" but someone edited a manuscript...).
Andy
LHC webcam: http://www.cyriak.co.uk/lhc/lhc-webcams.html
From TFA:
I really don't get the "I'm to cool to RTFA" thing myself, I find willful ignorance kinda undesirable.
Caveat Utilitor
would be more newsworthy, Especially considering that this experiment will either A. Destroy the world, B. prove the Higgs Boson and other crazy particulate theory, C. prove(disprove) the existence of....GOD D. all of the above
Who cares about the IT angle when I could walk away from this experiment saying "See, I TOLD YOU, God doesn't exist, the Higgs Boson is your new God" ..........and then create a new religion and be rich, RICH I TELLS YA!
"This is the value of a summer spent and a winter earned"
The other day, someone was watching a movie on his iPod Touch and walking on the road. He didn't see the black hole in front of him, and fell down. He got a glimpse of what the Big Bang was about!
slashdot rocks
While I find the grid at Cern impressive with their claim that "Cern will be using one of the biggest computer grids this summer to pool the processing power of about 100,000 CPUs worldwide", I find the SETI project even more impressive, which according to Berkley boasts "Currently the largest distributed computing effort with over 3 million users".
Granted, Cern claims that it processing its information at 1Gbps, I wonder how that stacks up against SETI
I think it might be a good idea to limit the size of AC posts, which would hopefully prevent these types of screeds from infecting every discussion.
The more you regulate a company, the worse its products become.
Please don't mention LHC and "Impact" in the same sentence. It's bad enough that I have to worry about invisible black holes (worse than cancer! And twice as hard to cure!), but now I have to worry about giant lifeforms crashing into Antarctica.
What has CERN ever done for the IT industry?
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
It means absolutely nothing for the wider IT industry. LHC Computing is engineered to distribute very large volumes of data (in the Petabytes/year range) around the world to scientists in an open and agreed upon format. It is paid for out of the science budgets of participating governments. The complementary challenges in the IT industry revolve around how to fairly distribute commercially available bandwidth and how to secure data and maintain privacy. In terms of open structure and intended use, LHC computing resembles the friendly collegial atmosphere of the early ARPANET, which is widely credited creating many of the bandwith and security problems IT is currently struggling with today.
...at the amount of tax money that's been collected at gunpoint (all taxes are collected at gunpoint) to fund this project? For those outside the European Union, many member states give a yearly funding to CERN.
I hate the EU, and when I see all those scientists dancing around like asses because of money that someone has forced me to pay them, I lose the motivation to work.
"Science" benefits mankind in the same way guns benefit mankind - if they're used in the right way. You can't just throw billions of euros at some problem and consider it worthy just because it employs the scientific method. Even if you're of meek build and wearing a lab coat, you can still be a thug and a thief who expects everyone else to fund your pet project.
This is why I am a mathematician and not a scientist. So much science is high priced sensationalist bullcrap, whereas advanced mathematics is just as cheap to do as basic mathematics. I'm never going to become a celebrity with global headlines just because I could afford to jack about with a huge toy but I am trying to help as many people as I can with numeracy to help them get further.
And before I hear a "oh oh oh but the web was invented at CERN", what is your point? (1) The invention had nothing to do with CERN itself; (2) the majority of ingredients already existed in not quite the same form, and it's rather irritating that TBL gets so much credit for a creation that involved a whole host more people.
EOR.
Dr. Horrible
Its an entertaining 45 minutes. It starts out kind of weak though.
So they want to recreate "The Big Bang".
I have no doubts that they will learn something from this study (they'd better considering the price of this thing!)
BUT it seems foolish to promote this study around the concept of the Big Bang when that is a HIGHLY contested theory that is statistically and conceptually almost impossible to have occurred and resulted in our current society at total random chance.
Why don't they instead promote the study around many of the other important things they have the potential to discover?
And their video is LAME. I prefer to stereotype the scientists on this project as ultra serious super-intelligent researchers, not a bunch of Youtube dorks, thank you very much.
How interesting... Just a 10Gbit/s WAN? How about, 11x that to each (combined) Tier-1 center via an optical private network to get the load of the data onto the Grid. How about the solutions created to get so much data spread out, indexed, replicated, and distributed. Perhaps that ain't that interesting. Perhaps the total capacity of the Grid being about 30 PB ain't that impressive. Perhaps the concept of more then 200 clusters big and small across different administrative domains at your finger tips might be not that challenging as it may seem. Ow well, let's focus on the database. Since that holds the least amount of actual data. Being it still is the biggest Oracle instance according to Oracle.
| sed -e 's/data/p0rn/' -e 's/scientists/Slashdotters/'
Fixed it for you. Now it makes more sense.
Have gnu, will travel.
There was never any big bang and there is no such thing as dark matter. All this is to support "big-bang gang". Univers is eternal, finite and unbounded.
use the tunnel for rollerblading once they've completed the experiment?
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Like the NASA man on the moon project of the 1960, this project will have many good offshoots of their research that have and will enhance our lives for many years to come.
I correspond to several people doing research at CERN and I see that many good ideas that will come out for IT and computer science.
LHC was a motivation for Grids in the same way that CERN's problem of sharing files was a motivation for Sir TBL to create the Web. But, being a motivation does not mean you invented or "pioneered" the freaking stuff. Grids were around in many forms waaaay before CERN decided to go for it.
If anything CERN has achieved in Grids, it is to stunt its growth. It sucked a huge amount of funding from EU for the LCG (LHC Computing Grid) is huge. The LCG is a grid designed by and for control freaks. Many sensible design features (distributed control, proper resource allocation and scheduling, transaction safety, fairness among users) for distributed systems were left out of the LCG. Why? Because it was primarily designed by fucking physicists with a lot of money and who thought they knew waaaay more than computer scientists.
It's no wonder that the industry lost its patience with the grid community and went on to clouds. That's what grids could've been.
Hey CERN, here's a message. Why don't you limit yourselves to claiming credit for physics stuff while computer scientists take distributed systems forward. Fucking morons taking credit for inventing the Web and pioneering Grids. Bah!
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