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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."

10 of 169 comments (clear)

  1. We need more evil scientists by David+Gerard · · Score: 5, Funny

    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
    1. Re:We need more evil scientists by GweeDo · · Score: 5, Funny

      Do you want to destroy the world?
      -ACCEPT- -DENY-

  2. Terrabytes by pablomme · · Score: 5, Funny

    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?
  3. Excellent rap! by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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
  4. Best source for evil scientist news by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Informative
    The Register's coverage of the LHC is a lot more, well, entertaining than the coverage by other newspapers. Same news, but a little more energy in the presentation...

    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
  5. Re:Sys Admin at CERN by Gromius · · Score: 5, Interesting

    trust me its not fun. Physicists are demanding, require unreasonable ungodly amounts of storage and computing power and will do whater the hell they like with it, usally fecking up the system in new and interesting ways. Even the grid isnt enough, we could use more cpu. I'm a physicist at cern (posting from the CMS control room, was there yestarday, twas exciting) and I wouldnt want to be my sys admin ;)

    Incidently offtopic, the LHC is down at the moment and has been all day. Apparently its something about a lost patrol.

  6. Please please! by Fallen+Andy · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Don't call it the "god particle" (Peter Higgs is an atheist just like his hero Paul Dirac).

    (Apparently it was originally "goddammned particle" but someone edited a manuscript...).

    Andy

  7. LHC webcam by Stroot · · Score: 5, Funny
  8. Re:Sys Admin at CERN by nomadic · · Score: 5, Funny

    And sysadminning for scientists is a goddamn nightmare. I'd just like you to imagine expert Fortran programmers who can't actually work a computer. And are way smarter than you in every way except ones that involve communicating with humans.

    Wow, when a sysadmin complains about someone else being bad at communicating with humans, that's saying something.

  9. Re:Sys Admin at CERN by Gromius · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No I'm with the parent. And I'm coming for the user/scientist side. The admins at scientific labs like CERN are basically doing a heroic job despite the best efforts of their users to be as awkward as possible.

    He's right, its almost impossible to get physicists to do what you want and by god if it goes down theres hell to pay, even if it *them* who brought it down doing something the admins told them not to. Admins cant really lock anything down and if they try to its circumvented and/or bitterly complained about. Plus they have to allow the user to run whatever programs they want as they mainly use (very poorly written) custom code. It all boils down to physicists being obsessed about their research to the point that getting it done is the *most important* thing and all else pales into significance.

    Again I mention that I'm physicist and I know I'm guilty of this, I've taken down the UK particle physics cluter farm (the tier 1 in grid speak) but these days I usually buy them a beer afterwards to make up for it.