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SETI@Home For Linux

Benny_Eggs writes "It's not the pretty screensaver version, but a SETI@HOME client for Linux is now available." For those of you unfamiliar with the project, Seti@Home is like Distributed.net, except instead of brute force encryption cracking, it searches radio signal noise looking for signs of intelligence.

185 comments

  1. Client problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn I get this too except on a Debian box. I tried every damn version possible. First the libc (duh)then glibc then the statically linked glibc one.

  2. No source != insecure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you read their FAQ, it says this thing sends all its data via HTTP. It's a very simple matter to just stick a sniffer and watch the traffic going across from the client and write something that will just blow bogus garbage back and forth. There's no need to even hack the client.

    If the client source was available, you'd have all the advantages typically talked about with open source projects (many eyes to find bugs, real security rather than security through obscurity, the opportunity for anyone to contribute, etc.) but the risk of "bad" data would be minimal, since I don't see how they can prevent people from submitting bad data with some piece of code they've written themselves anyway.

  3. well ok by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    dude i think y'all are wrong about this issue but
    i am running yer client anyways. good luck!

  4. Great. Just What we need. NOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cool, more psuedo science for the masses. While we search for Extraterrestrial Signals ( something we have an miniscule chance of finding even according to the SETI folk ) we let important projects go by the wayside such as mapping the distribution and trajectories of masses in our solar system that can hit the planet( a project that needs a really tiny investment but so far the gov refuses ). This is a valid threat and not just the subject of some movies that came out last summer.

    Its amazing how people will jump on to support any fantastic cause no matter how lame or implausible its science is. Don't get me wrong, I think there is Intelligence out there but I also think that a more immediate, well planned and cheaper project that deserves our attention are projects the like the near miss mapping stuff that people are trying to accomplish. Its well planned, cheap and would show immediate benefit.

    Sorry, always gotta do my Skeptical Enquirer thing( a great magazine for those of you who feel that reason is getting the short shrift in our modern world ).

    http://www.csicop.org/

  5. Holy VM usage! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PID USER PRI NI SIZE RSS SHARE STAT LIB %CPU %MEM TIME COMMAND?
    8380 jrob 20 15 12804 12M 188 R N 0 77.6 20.1 8:23 setiathome
    6284 jrob 20 19 148 120 64 R N 0 20.9 0.1 39418m rc5des

    Yeah, I was noticing that too. Spare cycles that can be freed up instantly whenever a higher priority process needs them is one thing, but 12MB RSS that needs to get swapped out is another matter entirely.

    Already filed one bug report ("source code missing"), suppose I'll make another ("half of available core suddenly missing").

  6. Great. Just What we need. NOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funky how every sceptic I know jumps up and yell "pseudoscience!!!" every time something remotely fantastic is mentioned, like the possibility of detectable intelligent extraterrestrial life. You may not realise it, but your close-mindedness is dogmatic in the same way that a new-age freakazoid contacting aliens through her shakra is dogmatic.

    The search for ETI is perfectly scientific and legitimate. Science builds on innovations and new ideas, and by definition every scientific revolution takes place in the same way a political revolution does: there is a case against the establishment, who usually discredits the idea in very unscientific ways; then, the new idea grows, and the establishment is either toppled or converted. What you fail to realise is that Science is not a fixed entity, but by definition must evolve to justify its very existence.

    Alright, back to aliens: the methods are right, the search is legitimate. In what way is your idea of looking for earthbound rocks any more scientific? I could take a sceptic stance and tell you you are being pseudoscientific for the following reasons:

    1) the probability of a space object colliding with Earth is, by NASA's own admission, minute. Jupiter got it right up the arse with S-L, but it remains a faint probability still.

    2) You are not acting out of scientific interests, but to reassure your own fears of death.

    3) You watched Armageddon and Deep Impact too much.

    Fortunately, I won't do so, because I believe both SETI and detection of probable Earth collision are both legitimate endeavours.

    Did you know that the very concept of meteorites was considered 'farmers' tales' and 'ludicrous' by the scientific establishment until one man decided to investigate further? He eventually determined that meteorites were indeed possible, but only after accepting the testimonies as containing a seed of truth, and working from there.

    Who is being sceptic about the sceptics? Who watches the watchmen?

  7. Great. Just What we need. NOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think this is a good project.. The prospects of finding life are rare sadly, but one may as well hope.. As for the tracking objects, the funds for observing these objects is limited. At the moment there is little data to even be distributed. I think my tax dollars should actually pay for that.. Where as SETI is something I consider a good canidate for volunteer/private funding.

  8. Oh, now THAT'S something worthwhile... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unless, of course, you are wrong.

  9. then how to stop people sniffing your HTTP link? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    as was said earlier in these replies.

    security through obscurity probably only works in war....

  10. PiHex has source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Colin Percival has a neat project. His clients have source code, but Win32 only, so far.

  11. This must become open source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The point is what if someone reported a positive data being false? That would ruin the entire project...

    Just as someone said somewhere up, if someone sent in a false block saying that a correct key is not it, the entire d.net project would have to start over!

  12. A willing hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, if you do and need a hand playing with code drop a line to me at sgzanzy(at)hotmail(dot)com. Ill get back to you with my 'real' address from there.

    heck, if you can drop a document or two describing what is actulay being printed into the files, that would be helpfull.

    PS-> anyone notice that 'outfile.txt' goes blank on the second block?

  13. Uh .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If there was alien life don't you think they'd alreay have tried to contact us??

    This is exactly what SETI@Home is trying to find out! Why is it that people seem to think that a interstellar radio signal from intelligent life would stick out like a sore thumb? If some form of intelligence ever did attempt to contact us, we would have to be listening for it; it's a bit silly to suggest that we could just sit back and wait for it without doing anything else.

    Another poster mentioned that the the probability of us ever receiving and detecting such a signal is incredibly low, and that the whole venture is a waste of time. Well, the probability is very low (at least in our lifetime) and it might be a waste of time. But it's idle time, so who cares? :-) And it gives us far better chances for detection than if we just had Jodie Foster sitting on the hood of her car, listening to individual frequencies (pi times the hydrogen line frequency, IIRC.)

    The bottom line: If you think it's a waste of time, don't do it. But whatever other people do with their idle time is really none of your business.

    It's as simple as that.

  14. We don't need this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, it sure is much more useful to prove we could break a 64 bits key in five years if we pulled together all computers in the world conected to the Internet than finding extra-terrestiral intelligent life... are you really *that* dense?

    How do you expect they to contact us? They would have to find us first, or just send signals at random targets (and we are not a particular good target, btw). Just like *we* did, for instance. And it would take an effort like this one to detect the signal *we* sent.

  15. Where's the screensaver? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have to admit that i'm a bit disappointed that the unix version does not include the screensaver.

  16. Sounds great, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For all intents and purposes, it is an intentional signal that SETI is looking for. However, that doesn't mean that we wouldn't be able to detect other radio "leakage." While the sci.astro FAQ is correct about TV signals, there are other conspicuous artifacts that could be detected. (For example, consider BMEWS, the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System, whose transmissions could be detected over 4,200 light years away.)

    At any rate, an intentional radio signal from deep space is not all that farfetched. We used the Arecibo antenna to send one to the great globular cluster in Hercules (M13) back in the 1970s. Of course, it will be a few hundred thousand years before we could reasonably expect a response. :-)

  17. Gloating and looking at stars. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, I think this project is quite cool, even if I don't expect it to find any signs of intelligence out there. However, it has a chance of detecting things that are equally interesting. You don't allways know what you are looking for when you start looking, and this is a pretty intense peek at the stars.

    I also got a chuckle out of their stats page.

    i686-pc-linux-gnu:
    Work units sent: 2957
    Results received: 1466
    CPU time: 2616 hr 54 min 35.4 sec
    Average CPU time per work unit: 1 hr 47 min 06.2 sec
    Pentium/Windows:
    Work units sent: 1246
    Results received: 672
    CPU time: 5307 hr 49 min 48.1 sec
    Average CPU time per work unit: 7 hr 53 min 54.8 sec

    -phantom (who can't seem to log in currently)

  18. Oh, now THAT'S something worthwhile... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll probably get flamed for this, but WOW that's a waste of time. Talk about a needle in a haystack. Take the needle, and make it submicroscopic (so small, it may not even exist,) and blow the haystack up to the size of, oh, I dunno... a couple of galaxies or two. Now, make the straws look like needles. These needles will be slightly, to grossly bent, though.

  19. not a memory problem... it's a modem problem !!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    13 MB is not too much memory (26 MB in fact in my
    2 dual P II Linux PCs :). But the problem is that with 4 PII, I need aproximately 4 blocks per hour = 96 blocks per day = 32 MB download per day !!!

    With my V90 modem and the communication costs (I'm in Europe it's REALLY expensive) it is nearly impossible to participate :'(

  20. No client for i[34]86? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm running it on two Linux Redhat 5.2 Firewalls - one a 486/66 and the other a 586/60...No crashes so far.

  21. We don't need this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We don't need another idle CPU project to deminish the power behing more useful projects such as distributed.net. There is no chance that people are going to find alien life this way - so why bother. We haveto think closer to home and work on getting the US government to change their policy on encryption.

    If there was alien life don't you think they'd alreay have tried to contact us??

  22. Big names?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's "cannibals", with two n's. Or did someone eat your other one? ;-)

  23. Screensaver by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At first I thought the idea of running the client as a "screensaver" sounded really dumb, but that
    screenshot of the Win32 client looks really technical and sweet!

    I hope they make a graphical client for X too.

  24. Finally! I've been waiting for this for months! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is far cooler than searching for primes, believe me.

  25. This looks like fun, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mentioned there are several other idle cpu programs - what are they (besides the encrytpion cracking ones)

  26. Oh, now THAT'S something worthwhile... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, wasn't finished. Now, let's randomly pick up one straw (needle) at a time, look at it from a billion different angles, then FINALLY decide that no, it is NOT a needle, but a piece of straw that looks like one. OK, sure, now we've got Haystack@HOME that can run in the background of every computer on earth, so now we've got a few thousand people looking at staws. Dumb.

    At least with distributed net, you've got a finite number of possibilities, and a solid definition of what you're looking for. Seti@HOME is searching random noise for SOME kind of pattern, but we don't know WHAT.

    Tell you what, try this. Try cloning Quake II by running a billion computers in paralell, conting up from 0 to a maximum of 1 x 10^819200000. Eventually, you'll hit that ONE magical byte sequence that is Quake II. In fact, you'll hit Wolfenstein 3d, PFS:Write (cloned for any OS you want,) and Math Blaster along the way! Holy shit, it'll be amazing! Who knows WHAT we'll find! I've got to get on this..

  27. The search for God, er, ET... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think what the original poster was refering to when they called SETI "pseudoscience" was the motivation behind it.

    Currently, the existence of intelligent extraterrestrial life is a fiercely debated subject within scientific circles. For that matter, so is the existence of life on other worlds ( as well as a number of issues between the advent of life and all of the steps to intelligence ).

    The reason for this is simply because it challenges many of our societies belief systems, specifically, religious beliefs. If life ( and especially intelligent life ) exist elsewhere within our galaxy, then this really shoots the "god made man in his own image" school of theology in the head.

    Likewise, as the belief in religious values has waned in our society, many people have sought to replace a belief in a higher power with something else. In short, many people have crossed out "God" and written "ET" in it's place.

    So in this sense, SETI is "pseudoscience" in that it's almost impossible for people to talk about it without dragging in huge piles of pre-conceived cultural/religious expectations. Since objectivity is a pre-requisite for science, this puts SETI very close to the edge.

    As an aetheist, God is a non-issue for me. As a skeptic, so is SETI, and I find the enthusiasm for the subject tedious. In this respect I tend to agree with the original poster - the mapping of near Earth asteriods is of immediate concern since Tunguska type events are likely to happen about once per centuary.

    Not that anyone will probably pay much attention until a major city like New York or Londen gets wiped out.

    Just my fourty meters of random space debris gang.

  28. These are new people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I too volunteered to write and test some of the networking code. I've got a ton of networking equipment lying around, and about a dozen different types of computers for testing.

    The original people were just a bunch of stoned hippies, with some wild ideas and no clues. They threw up a web page, got a lot of people to email them with support, then they went out and tried to get financial backing. When that didn't happen, they just faded away. One of them sits in the office next to me.

    These current people are entirely commercial, and all of their programmers are paid and under tight NDA rules. They don't want any volunteers who work for another company. And they want to own the code they develop so they can sell it later, with no hassles.

    So basically everyone who runs this and sends them bug reports are just unpaid beta testers for some commercial software.

    Free the source, and the rest will follow.

  29. maybe the aliens aren't going to send a sine wave? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just a thought. there is nothing particularly "universal" about the fourier transform. btw, check out the stats page. i looks like they are getting more done today than they did in the entire time previous =0

  30. No client for i[34]86? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gosh, I wish I had an i586 or i686 to run this
    on. I guess distributed.net is going to get my
    cycles a little longer.

  31. Client problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everything correct? (y/n) y
    Bad file header


    I get that error each time I try to set up a new account with the SETI client. I've tried both the
    statically linked and the glibc2.1 version on my Redhat 5.2 box.

    Any ideas what the problem could be?

  32. How to find sky picture from RA and DEC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Comments? I hacked this out, and am not sure if it is exact - any astronomers to check it out?

    You will need to manually convert the right acension and declination of your chunk of data.

    1) find the work_unit.txt file.
    2) find this data:

    start_ra=21.953
    start_dec= 22.84
    end_ra=21.993
    end_dec= 23.16

    3) The ra and dec are obviously ranges. Take the middle of each. This is the location of the part of the sky observed within the equatorial coordinate system.

    4) Convet these decimal values to Hours, minutes and seconds for Right Acension and Degrees, minutes and seconds for Declination.

    e.g.
    centered ra = 22.993-21.953=.04
    21.953+0.4 = 22.353 RA

    22 Hours,
    .353*60 = 21.180 Minutes
    .180*60 = 10 seconds

    RA = 22:21:10


    centered dec = 23.16-22.84=.32
    22.84+.32 = 23.16 DEC

    23 Degrees
    .16*60 = 9.60 Minutes
    .60*60 = 36 Seconds

    DEC = 23:09:36

    5) Go to http://skview.gsfc.nasa.gov/easy.html

    6) Enter in the RA and DEC as: 22 21 10, 23 09 36

    7) Select Optical survey

    8) See patch of sky with center in the middle of Arecibo's observation slew.

  33. Great. Just What we need. NOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Couple of points:

    • SETI is privately funded. I'm not saying that you claimed anything to the contrary, but you did allude to the government's spending on programs to detect objects in near-Earth orbits. I mention this only because you inevitably hear people complain about how they don't want "the government" wasting money on a pursuit that they consider pointless (or, in some cases, sinful.)

    • How would harnessing a lot of computing power help find objects in near-Earth orbits? We need more measuring and observing tools, not distributed computing power.

    • Sure, it's a long shot; nobody has claimed otherwise. But what do you care what people do with their idle CPU cycles?
  34. Oh, now THAT'S something worthwhile... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice analogy, but it's a bit wrong. The way I see it is that we've got a huge haystack, but nobody knows if how many needles are in it, or even if there are no needles at all. But if we don't look, we'll never know!

    Think of it this way. If Seti @Home finds alien life, it will be the most groundbreaking discovery that modern science has ever made. But if it doesn't, all that's been wasted are a few CPU cycles which could have been used for dull, monotonous things like finding the next prime number, or cracking some arbitrary RC5 code that we all know will simply be cracked anyway by brute force. Both of these have an extremely marginal scientific value compared to that of the possibility of discovering another civilisation!

    But when it comes down to it, I have my computer and you have yours. You go find a prime on yours if you want, but I'll chip in my 2 cents worth to help a scientific experiment that just might change the world.

  35. Client problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm... Too bad we don't have the source code.

  36. If you're interested .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .. check out this URL:

    http://www.setiquest.com/lemav0n0.htm

    Have fun!

  37. There is currently a project to do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you trieing to say that if you wanted to run the client then you would have to actually have a physical tape of the data to process... well if that is the case then I feel you are wrong as i understand it from their site the data is recorded from The dish onto 35gb tapes then shiped to calafornia where it is devided up into .25 meg chunks and sent over the internet to all the users so all you have to do to run it is download, install, and have internet access. I am sorry for my spelling :-)
    "Cogito Ergo Estis"
    -TekDragin

  38. Get your facts straight, will ya? :-) by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Damn it! I forgot about that fact.. *foot in mouth* Ok.. Why would they be ignorant to the proxy fact? Conspiracy?

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  39. The surest sign that intelligent life exists... by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Yeah.. Becuase they know as a group we are nothing more than morons.. Like the webpage.

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  40. Free porn is still out there... by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    There is plenty of free porn on the net..
    Just click HERE.

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  41. Big names?? by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Any one know of any big names going to implament this....I can imagine it now.. NASA's currently #1...=P

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  42. Wait a minute.. by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    I think pointing the dish would be a bit hard.. Since it is the size of a valley!

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  43. Warning, will NOT go thru firewall.. by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Hmmmm.. Well isn't the software open source?

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  44. Perhaps d.net and SETI@Home will work together.... by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Actually if your machine finds something, you are credited for it!! Hell, I wouldn't mind another body named what I wanted! hehe.. The Ellis D25 quasar!!

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  45. But not through this firewall...Why not? by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Ah.. I don't they would notice any porn comming through from that site.. That a site to my record company, which needs to be updated... If you want real free porn goto www.pleasure-zone.com

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  46. Sounds great, but... by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Hmmm I wonder how they figured out the 4k light year range...

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  47. Free porn is still out there... by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    There is plenty of free porn on the net..
    Just click HERE.

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  48. �Psuedo? by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    How is this a psuedo science.. We are using proven technologies. There is nothing fake about it.. The science of telling the future is a psuedo science.. Check your facts..

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  49. Here's the best solution: by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Since most needles are made up of a magenitally attacted metal, you would take an electrically excited magnet, and place it over the hay stack. And bingo, you have the needle right then, and anything that was like it, ie pitch forks, changes, guns and so on...

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  50. Perhaps d.net and SETI@Home will work together by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Yup, now it time to play the lottery just to make beuwolfs just for this!! =P

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  51. Even more!! by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Hmm.. Wonder if they name black holes..

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  52. cat > /dev/audio only works with raw data by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    I'm going for 16bit, but if there were smart 32bit would be alot better for this.. Better imaging..

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  53. Big names?? by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Well I was talking about companies just having their employees run this.. You know that all the nerdy university kids are going to be running this.. Hey, now they can do something useful with those clusters they keep building..

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  54. Big names?? by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Some took a byte out of my cannibal....So there!!!

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  55. Other distributed projects. by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Yeah it if wasn't /.'d.. Hahahahahahahahahahaaaa.. Irony any one.. But when will I be able to set up my 98 box to distro my processes so I can play Half Life faster?

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  56. What we need... by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Is a program that comes with every possible color and wave length in the world.... Come on.. Simple number generators are complete bull shit IMO.

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  57. �I can see disaster coming? by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Hmm.. Think about everything that is transmitted via radio link.. So there for, there is alot of porn in space now....Hmmm lot of free porn.. I think I will build a house on mars and just grab the signals!!!

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  58. search for intelligence? by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    You have to to think about the animals that live there.. =>

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  59. If only had a spell checker.. by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    If I wasn't trying to type so fast and talk to people at the same time, I think I could spell a hell of alot better.

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  60. Warning, will NOT go thru firewall.. by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Sorry.. I remembered when they did have code...

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  61. unobtrusive? nope.. by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    It would slow it down quite a bit since it's using what is avail of your cpu, and using alot of swap space..

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  62. IT is available by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Yeah, only for linux....

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  63. Stupid me.. by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Wouldn't this take the data and throw it on the audio level, there for making it play the data.. (Just trying to remember the best I can...)

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  64. Hmm.. Worth it, I really do think so....... by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    Yeah, think about what new things we can figure out with all the data comming back from us. Think about all the new equations and theories and all that!... Hell if I had alot of money I would make a farm of slave machines doing nothing but this.. I think most (guess of at least of 80%) people from RC5 would toss their client and get this.. I think the amount of computers that are going to be doing this would be at 10 times greater than what is on RC5.. Just to think about that, how fast we could possible get all that info that is stored ran through with proper advertisement. /. knows about it, I think CNN, ABC, CBS, and the rest should really cover this. All the possibilities that can come from this project!!!!!!! *Drool*

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  65. Get your facts straight, will ya? :-) by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    If it's HTTP, then it can go through a proxy... Think about it...

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  66. This must become open source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I realize that there are reasons to keep this closed source to preserve data integrity, but we all know those reasons are dumb. anything you can do by hacking the source can be done through reverse engineering- and if someone reports a false positive, it's easy to check be running the data on a trusted computer.

    I sent a comment asking them to open source it, and I hope you did too.

  67. Sounds great, but... by Tom+Rothamel · · Score: 1
    This is not just an encryption contest, and much more is at stake.

    Not really. The problem here is that it's difficult to detect earth-like signals from other planets. (In other star systems.) According to the Sci.astro FAQ, we couldn't detect a TV signal at a distance of 0.01 light years. (I'ts interesting that most of the signals that we transmit that _can_ be detected at that range we'd consider unimportant in a SETI search.)

    While this can probably detect an alien race transmitting a "beacon" meant for us to find, the chances of us finding earth-like leakage is minimal.

  68. No client for i[34]86? by ir · · Score: 1

    Well they don't even have the i586 one ready yet. I'm running the 686 one on my Cyrix 5x86/100 cpu with no problems (a 486).

    --
    Irina Romanov
  69. Ok does anyone SEE the win32 client? by ir · · Score: 1

    Probably beta testers.

    --
    Irina Romanov
  70. Never any source code for these things. Why? by Jordy · · Score: 1

    RC5 had source for a long time, but people kept modifying clients to give false reports.. not to mention use screwy compiler options which would result in broken binaries giving false reports.

    SETI@Home does have source available if you register as a developer if I remember correctly.

    --

    --
    The world is neither black nor white nor good nor evil, only many shades of CowboyNeal.
    1. Re: Never any source code for these things. Why? by Tom+Rothamel · · Score: 2

      How come they never release the source for any of these "idle CPU" clients/projects?

      They want to be sure that noone runs bogus clients. In something like this, one bad result could destroy the whole project. (For example, supposed the d.net client returned a no rather than a yes when it found the RC-foo key.)

      This isn't to say I completely agree... I'd probably prefer a system where a server checks out open-source clients to see if the're not bogus. (Throws some know problem sets at it every once in a while, and sees that it answers correctly.)

  71. We don't need this, but it would be nice... by phil+reed · · Score: 1

    There is no chance that people are going to find alien life this way - so why bother.

    And your basis for this statement is...??

    If there was alien life don't you think they'd alreay have tried to contact us??

    And what makes you think they haven't? Perhaps we just have not been listening?

    The laws of physics apply to the entire universe, not just here. If there's no such thing as faster-than-light space transport, then that applies to civilizations on other planets. That would leave something like radio as the only practical alternative for communicating (even if the communications turned out to be something as simple as a beacon - "Hello out there!"). So, perhaps there's a universe full of beacons, but we have not been listening for them. In that case, Seti@home could turn out to have a pretty dramatic payback.


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  72. Sounds great, but... by phil+reed · · Score: 1

    Analysis of propogation loss of RF energy in free space, multiplied by effective radiated power, with some guesses about how weak a signal you can reasonably pull out of the noise before quantum effects step all over it.


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  73. Distibuted.net's day is passing... by phil+reed · · Score: 1

    The whole point of the 64 bit encryption is that 64 bit is used for all the millary and govenment encryption,

    I don't think you can support this statement. Skipjack is 128 bits. Triple-DES is 112, and easier to implement. I seriously doubt that you have access to classified information to show otherwise.

    when we crack the 64 bit encryption

    In 5 years? wooo.

    it is going to get all the governments and companys in the world extremely worried.

    Not likely. As I said, I don't think you'll find many governments using 64 bit encryption. The governments would do better to be worried about the NSA inserting backdoors in the encryption they do have (take a look here).

    Like I said, any political statement distributed.net could make has been made. Time to move on.


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  74. I think you are wrong by phil+reed · · Score: 1

    I'm indifferent on this myself, but there are alot of other things that should come before that. Kosovo, medical research, etc.

    If somebody could come up with a way whereby my spare CPU cycles would solve the Kosovo crisis, I'd have the entire company switched over tomorrow.

    As for medical research, there probably is some distributed analysis that could be run in this environment, probably some genetic research. But, unless you could convince me that the results would not be snapped up by some private corporation, then used to generate huge profits, then I'll donate my CPU cycles somewhere. That's an advantage to SETI - hard to determine a profit motive.


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  75. Other distributed projects. by phil+reed · · Score: 1

    You can find a list here.


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  76. Umm... It says Available Soon... by gavinhall · · Score: 1

    Posted by jpepin:

    Or am I looking in the wrong place?

    Joe

  77. Where's the screensaver? by Jamie+Zawinski · · Score: 1
    I would love to have an xscreensaver module for this.

    The question is, what kind of graphic visualization of the search should be done? What does their Windows client look like, anything?

    Perhaps the display should contain multiple kinds of data, maybe a map of the sky in one part of the screen, and a graph of area searched over time, or hits found over time, or something like that?

    Having it be an OpenGL hack might be interesting too: what if the "sky display" was a rolling sphere with a star-map drawn on it, with grid-cells that lit up for the area being searched, or the areas that had already been covered by others? (But maybe the SETI client doesn't work that way?)

  78. Security through obscurity can be avoided by Paul+Crowley · · Score: 1

    I don't know what SETI@Home are doing, but certainly for distributed.net it's not hard to check up on people. You can generate a cryptographic "proof" that you've tried all the keys in a given block; then you sign all your proofs to say that they were all honestly generated. If you hand out a few duplicate blocks you can quickly detect if a given person is generating false proofs, discard all their data and publically humiliate them.
    --

  79. Proxy (was: Warning, will NOT go thru firewall..) by Dom2 · · Score: 1

    A transparent firewall should work fine, as should a transparent http proxy. Unfortunately, for a network like mine, a http proxy has to specifically specified - and there's no way to do this with the current software.

    Any chance of proxy support? I've got about 15 UltraSPARC's that I'd love to put to some good use!

  80. Get your facts straight, will ya? :-) by smartin · · Score: 1

    The FAQ says that it will work on a firewall that passes http. It says nothing about proxies.

    --
    The difference between Canada and the USA is that in Canada healthcare is a right and gun ownership is a privilege.
  81. Double Blind it! by Python · · Score: 1
    Simple solution. Send the same data out to multiple clients. They should all come back with the same results. This is good scientific method anyway, it verifies that the clients are working and keeps human factors to a minimum.

    Regardless, the data should be analyzed many times by different groups to keep the results honest and error free. Its the Scientific method! :-)
    --
    Python

    --

    Python

  82. Get your facts straight, will ya? :-) by Thomas+Charron · · Score: 1

    Need to correct myself.. It will not go thru a proxy. Most places use a proxy to serve up net content, not a strait-thru firewall..

    --
    -- I'm the root of all that's evil, but you can call me cookie..
  83. Get your facts straight, will ya? :-) by Thomas+Charron · · Score: 1

    There are several things that affect as to if a program can go thru a proxy or not:

    Does it support proxies?
    Does it support proxy authentication?

    Not all HTTP applications can go thru a proxy. It requires connecting to the proxy and telling it you want to pull another URL. YOU think about it some..

    --
    -- I'm the root of all that's evil, but you can call me cookie..
  84. Warning, will NOT go thru firewall.. by Thomas+Charron · · Score: 1

    The only limiting factor I've seen is that it will NOT use a firewall of any type.. MAJOR limitation in my book.

    Back to distributed.net cracking, I guess..

    --
    -- I'm the root of all that's evil, but you can call me cookie..
  85. Warning, will NOT go thru firewall.. by Thomas+Charron · · Score: 1

    Wrong again..

    --
    -- I'm the root of all that's evil, but you can call me cookie..
  86. Great. Just What we need. NOT by Thomas+Charron · · Score: 1

    Hey, that actually sounds like a REALLY neat project idea.. Do you know of any pages that actually have the math involed in this, and perhaps trajectory information of current known bodies?

    --
    -- I'm the root of all that's evil, but you can call me cookie..
  87. Oh yeah, this is great. I can see disaster coming by jd · · Score: 1

    As Jodie Foster in Contact says - there's no way they'd understand it. Which makes sense, as nobody on Earth understands it either.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  88. Sorry to hear that they didn't respond by marcus · · Score: 1

    They were plenty talkative with me. I admit that I did not have any questions. I just said, "here try doing the socket io like this and how about this for the console?" with working code snips from their code attached. The guy I emailed responded right away and said he'd check it out. Two days later he replied and said thanks, and that they'd incorporate the changes.

    Then I went off to work on something else...

    --
    Good judgement comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgement.
    - W. Wriston, former Citibank CEO
  89. Ever hear of NEAT? by marcus · · Score: 1

    http://huey.jpl.nasa.gov/~spravdo/neat.html

    --
    Good judgement comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgement.
    - W. Wriston, former Citibank CEO
  90. Hey, they incorporated my code! by marcus · · Score: 1

    Or at least my suggestions even if they didn't use my code. It's up and running here and d.n is down the tubes. Too bad they never got v3 together. It was fun while it lasted.

    --
    Good judgement comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgement.
    - W. Wriston, former Citibank CEO
  91. Never any source code for these things. Why? by Chuck+Milam · · Score: 1

    How come they never release the source for any of these "idle CPU" clients/projects?

    ---------------

  92. Oh yeah, this is great. I can see disaster coming by Hrunting · · Score: 1

    Big deal. How's the alien going to know it's porn? You're assuming that a) aliens know that there's something inherently private about a naked body and/or the act of procreating in our culture and b) what the Hell's going on in the picture anyway.

  93. Never any source code for these things. Why? by asmussen · · Score: 1

    At one point during the development cycle, the source code for unix was available. I downloaded it at the time, and reported a few changes that had to be made to the code and the makefile to make it compile under Linux and AIX. It was mostly simple stuff like taking -lsocket out of the compiler options, and a few prototype changes, so I doubt I was the only one to figure it out. So, even though they might not have the source code right out there on the web page, it was available publicly at one point, and therefore anything but secret.

    --
    Shawn Asmussen
  94. Distibuted.net's day is passing... by jonabbey · · Score: 1

    It's been nearly 2 years that the rc5-64 challenge has been running, and distributed.net has only covered like 6% of the keyspace.. taking 10 years to exhaust a single 64 bit keyspace does nothing other than to demonstrate that key-cracking big keyspaces is really, really hard.

    SETI@Home may have much worse odds, or it may have much better odds, we just don't know, and that makes it far more interesting. Attempt enough trillions of trillions of keys and you will crack it.. it's just counting, really.

  95. Never any source code for these things. Why? by Joe+Decker · · Score: 1

    Some do.

    GIMPS, "The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search", is currently pullling more than half a teraflop using idle cycles to find large prime numbers, and the source for its clients is at http://www.mersenne.org/source.htm .

    --Joe

  96. Here's the solution: by Skip666Kent · · Score: 1

    If there *is* a needle in haystack, and someone takes a nap on the haystack, Farmer John's Theorem clearly states that the needle will find either the left or the right buttock (depending on which hemisphere the haystack is located in) of the napper at the precise instant that said napper attains the Most Comfortable Position Possible within said haystack.

    What we need is to re-create the cosmic equivalent of the above described scenario, at which point Intelligent Life will undoubtedly find us, prick us in the rear and send us on our way, cursing and searching for a better place to take a nice, quiet nap.

    (yawn)

    --
    **>>BELCH
  97. Exactly the opposite by Morgaine · · Score: 1

    I think you may have missed the point here. If reruns of I Love Zorblak are indeed flying around in our corner of the galaxy then SETI programs have a chance of detecting them, whereas without such searches then we would not know that we are in the vicinity of such broadcasts at all. Your reasoning seems to be 180 degrees off target.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
  98. Where's the screensaver? by synaptic · · Score: 1

    I just assumed there would not be a screensaver available for Unix platforms. However, I was peeking through the .txt files that are created after you run the client. What would stop us from creating our own visual display of the data? outfile.txt = interesting signals? work_unit.txt = the raw data Outfile contains things like: gaussian: peak=5.596647e-01 mean=5.280021e-01 ra=21.901 dec= 22.28 time= 2451246.16512 freq=1420360510.73 sigma=4.804805e+00 chisqr=2.706838e+00 fft_len=8192 chir prate=7.105420e-01 I'm no astrophysicist but I got enough from Contact that ra must mean right ascension (or something like that), dec == declination, time is time, there's the frequency, and the rest I'm a little unsure about. work_unit.txt contains things like: start_ra=21.888 start_dec= 22.16 end_ra=21.928 end_dec= 22.53 angle_range= 0.666 time_recorded= 2451246.16476 (Mon Mar 8 07:57:14 1999) subband_center=1420355832.96 subband_base=1420351560.50 subband_sample_rate=9765.62 fft_len=2048 ifft_len=8 subband_number=36 receiver=ao1420 nsamples=1048576 tape_version= 1.30 num_positions=22 [$num_positions coordinates] end_seti_header [DATA] Couldn't we figure this out and make a GTK/SVGALib app that polls the files and displays pretty pictures? And hell, that program could communicate with some type of master server. It would say, "Hey, I'm working on this part of the sky". And you could go to a web page and see a generated imagemap of the sky that contains color-coded regions of places you've checked, places everyone has checked, etc.. and you could click on those regions to see the peaks. And there could be a top-10 list of peak signals. This doesn't sound unreasonable to me. I'd be willing to work on the webpage end and contribute what I can to decoding the text files.

  99. add on to Xscreensaver by synaptic · · Score: 1

    Why don't we get a mailing list together?

    The biggest hurdle will be decoding the data but I think that can easily be overcome.

    You said that your problems with the people at Seti were that they wouldn't give you any details about the data, right? Maybe we can find one of the source releases and go from there?

  100. Where's the screensaver? by synaptic · · Score: 1

    I just assumed there would not be a screensaver available for Unix platforms. However, I was peeking through the .txt files that are created after you run the client. What would stop us from creating our own visual display of the data?

    outfile.txt = interesting signals?
    work_unit.txt = the raw data

    Outfile contains things like:

    gaussian: peak=5.596647e-01 mean=5.280021e-01 ra=21.901 dec= 22.28 time= 2451246.16512 freq=1420360510.73 sigma=4.804805e+00 chisqr=2.706838e+00 fft_len=8192 chir
    prate=7.105420e-01

    I'm no astrophysicist but I got enough from Contact that ra must mean right ascension (or something like that), dec == declination, time is time, there's the frequency, and the rest I'm a little unsure about.

    work_unit.txt contains things like:
    start_ra=21.888
    start_dec= 22.16
    end_ra=21.928
    end_dec= 22.53
    angle_range= 0.666
    time_recorded= 2451246.16476 (Mon Mar 8 07:57:14 1999)
    subband_center=1420355832.96
    subband_base=1420351560.50
    subband_sample_rate=9765.62
    fft_len=2048
    ifft_len=8
    subband_number=36
    receiver=ao1420
    nsamples=1048576
    tape_version= 1.30
    num_positions=22
    [$num_positions coordinates]
    end_seti_header
    [DATA]

    Couldn't we figure this out and make a GTK/SVGALib app that polls the files and displays pretty pictures?

    And hell, that program could communicate with some type of master server. It would say, "Hey, I'm working on this part of the sky". And you could go to a web page and see a generated imagemap of the sky that contains color-coded regions of places you've checked, places everyone has checked, etc.. and you could click on those regions to see the peaks. And there could be a top-10 list of peak signals.

    This doesn't sound unreasonable to me. I'd be willing to work on the webpage end and contribute what I can to decoding the text files.

  101. Blessed clients are _not_ bad.... by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

    .... netrek has used 'em for years without trouble. However, the source _should_ be free, if only so people can contribute patches and see what _exactly_ they are running. You can download source to various netrek clients but those clients cannot connect to blessed servers, because the netrek world had this very same problem: clever folks would 'borg' their clients giving them auto torp det, auto plasma lance, auto phaser aim, etc..

    Just don't give the private blessing key to anyone.

  102. There is currently a project to do this by Decibel · · Score: 1

    Currently, their biggest bottleneck is that all of their data is stored on magnetic tapes that aren't in a library (read as, you have to manually stick them into a tape drive). I'll try to find the URL when I get home.

  103. Linux is First !!!! by overlord · · Score: 1

    Linux is first, but I would like to have teems
    as d.net.

    OverLord



    linux-gnu:
    Work units sent: 1940
    Results received: 793
    CPU time: 1376 hr 04 min 16.2 sec
    Average CPU time per work unit: 1 hr 44 min 07.0 sec
    SunOS 5.5:
    Work units sent: 699
    Results received: 628
    CPU time: 433 hr 52 min 37.5 sec
    Average CPU time per work unit: 0 hr 41 min 27.2 sec
    unknown:
    Work units sent: 869
    Results received: 576
    CPU time: 4249 hr 01 min 47.2 sec
    Average CPU time per work unit: 7 hr 22 min 36.4 sec

  104. Big names?? by J05H · · Score: 1

    Any one know of any big names going to implament this....I can imagine it now.. NASA's currently #1...=P


    I'm not sure what your getting at, but NASA bailed on any SETI research in 1992, or early 93. Basically, they had a program called "HRMS", the High Resolution Microwave Survey. Congress got wind of it, and in a flurry of budget cutting and snide comments about a "little green men", they canned the program.

    Luckily, the fledgling SETI Institute was able to get NASA to donate the hardware that had been built and used it for the first runs of Project Phoenix. Except for that initial burst of govt. hardware, Phoenix has been completely privately funded.

    I'm actually really happy that NASA won't touch SETI. It leaves the entire field open to enterprising scientists, instead of it being run by the rather fickle adminstration in NASA and Congress.

    Some individuals inside NASA might run the screensaver, but it won't be an agency-wide project, that's for sure.

    --
    gigantino.tv - Heavy but weighs nothing.
  105. Oh, now THAT'S something worthwhile... by Latrell+Sprewell · · Score: 1

    Waste of time that it maybe, at least it's just idle time that would otherwise be wasted on most people's computers. Personally, even if the project doesn't find signals from intelligent life, perhaps some new cosmic elements could be identified, such as a new pulsar. They said that more radio telescope data is being collected than can be processed by the astronomers. Why not use the power of all those wasted idle cycles to help process that data (or factor mersenne primes or work on rc5, etc.)..

  106. Sounds great, but... by NrlNet · · Score: 1

    I hope they would not rely on a single client for the data analysis results on any given block. If they have any smarts at all they'd send the data to several client and compare the results. Erroneous data could be ignored.

  107. Never any source code for these things. Why? by tobyl · · Score: 1

    Because then you'd find out that it's just a front for the NSA to crack non-critical PGP encrypted messages.

  108. Ok does anyone SEE the win32 client? by walflour · · Score: 1
    cause on the stats page i saw this

    Windows NT: 4.0:
    Work units sent: 86
    Results received: 47
    CPU time: 548 hr 33 min 42.3 sec
    Average CPU time per work unit: 11 hr 40 min 17.5 sec
    Windows 95: 4.10:
    Work units sent: 123
    Results received: 47
    CPU time: 340 hr 34 min 44.3 sec
    Average CPU time per work unit: 7 hr 14 min 46.9 sec
    Windows 95: 4.0:
    Work units sent: 90
    Results received: 30
    CPU time: 177 hr 08 min 55.2 sec
    Average CPU time per work unit: 5 hr 54 min 17.8 sec

    whats up with that?
    --

    --
    When she told me I was average, she was just being mean.
  109. Perhaps d.net and SETI@Home will work together by walflour · · Score: 1

    If they do find something you dont think that they would but the name of the owner of the machine that found it. That would a heck of a press release to be associated with!
    --

    --
    When she told me I was average, she was just being mean.
  110. Moving to Seti@Home by Maximilian · · Score: 1

    I too have been glad to participate in d.net but we've proven our point; now we need something interesting to solve that isn't so esoteric as a "Goloomb ruler". Finding space aliens does it for me!

    I'm moving over; if S@H could get a team stats engine going, I'll bet a lot of /.'ers will move to.

  111. Never any source code for these things. Why? by Irishman · · Score: 1

    I thought the source code problem was due to restrictions of exporting encryption code to agents outside the USA/Canada. I realize that the algorithm is freely available, but as I understand the export restrictions, it's the source code that cannot be sent outside the country, not in electronic form anyway.

    As for non-encryption idle CPU tasks, the blessed client reason does seem to make sense, but only when combined with some sort of authentication mechanism.

  112. Perhaps d.net and SETI@Home will work together by Irishman · · Score: 1

    It might be a bit of a stretch, but perhaps with enough interest, the distributed.net folks could help out the SETI folks. As many have stated in previous posts, it's only a matter of time for the 64bit encryption to be broken. While looking at encryption strength is important, there are more interesting things for that much computing power to work on.

    Unfortunately, there is no contest involved, and no guarantees of finding anything at the end, but there is always that chance...

  113. Perhaps d.net and SETI@Home will work together by Irishman · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I didn't mean that you wouldn't be credited, what I meant was that there is no guarantee that anyone will find anything.

    I agree tho, just the chance to have my name associated with that find is worth it!

  114. I think you are wrong by Freshman · · Score: 1

    We don't need another idle CPU project to deminish the power behing more useful projects such as distributed.net.

    Nobody is forcing you to use your CPU idle time. It's voluntary. And how is distributed.net more useful? It's just a game of luck with no purpose, see who can find the key the fastest. We already know it can be done, it's been done before. Woopee-dee.

    There is no chance that people are going to find alien life this way - so why bother.

    Why bother? Because there is no chance that we are going to find alien life by sitting on our asses. Yes, the chances are small, but a small chance is better than no chance.

    We haveto think closer to home and work on getting the US government to change their policy on encryption.

    I'm indifferent on this myself, but there are alot of other things that should come before that. Kosovo, medical research, etc.

    If there was alien life don't you think they'd alreay have tried to contact us??

    Exactly! Say ET is out there somewhere trying to find us. ET beams a big signal saying "hey, I'm here". But what good will that do if nobody is listening for it?

    --

    ----------
    "They misunderestimated me." --George W Bush, Nov. 6, 2000
  115. Great. Just What we need. NOT by david614 · · Score: 1

    If you think that mapping the distribution and trajectories of masses in our solar system (asteroid detection to avoid near-earth interaction or collision) is a good idea (and I agree), why not organize a public project using an open source-designed algorithm to analyze the data. I would certainly assign two of my four pcs to the task. Maybe all of them if someone really tried to convince me!

    Carping about SETI@Home is not the answer.

    There are enough idle pcs out there to do both jobs.

    --
    ELITISM: It's always lonely at the top. Uninvited company is rarely welcome.
  116. Sounds like a waste of time by Geinus+Roy · · Score: 1

    Within X ly, there are no civs X years ahead of us. If there were, we'd be flooded with reruns of I Love Zorblak. All of the trekies in the world with this software won't change that.

  117. They would flood us and be easily detectable by Geinus+Roy · · Score: 1

    We'd find them easily with no need for this.

  118. most projects need that kind of memory by rillian · · Score: 1

    This is a serious advantage rc5 has over most of the other distributed computing projects--it's got a microscopic memory footprint.

    d.net's only looking at 64bits at a time.

    ok, that's facetious, but they're trying to decrypt a one-line message. Seti@Home is trying to analyse radio signals, and the unit of work is significantly bigger--350K on my machine. It's constantly doing fourier transforms of that and searching for peaks and trends. I don't think you could do that efficiently is much less memory.

    So yes, until everybody's got 128MB of RAM, this will limit participation.

    You could try the GIMPS project ( www.mersenne.org). It's not as sexy perhaps, but still new territory. My client weighs in at 1.6 MB.

  119. cat > /dev/audio only works with raw data by rillian · · Score: 1

    /dev/audio isn't very smart about file formats--it's just a dumb device, so you pretty much have to give it raw audio data.

    look at the work_unit.txt file. It's got a header, followed by some printable-coded binary data. One has to figure out how they've does the character encoding.

    my guess is some sort of hacked uuencode. The faq says the portion out 0.25MB data blocks, and my work_unit.txt is 320K--about the right ratio for uuencodes 3->4 byte expasion.

    Then, it's unlikely to be in 16-bit stereo, so one has to figure out what kind of samples they used. Probably single channel but 8-bit, 16-bit, what? Or, goddess help us, some kind of float--scientists seem fond of that datatype, despite the portability problems.

  120. I didn't join them either by rillian · · Score: 1

    I responded to the initial call for developers back in july. I fact, I think I saw the announcement here, but looks like Rob's deselected that article. :(

    Anyway, they did answer their emails in my experience, but it quickly became apparent they weren't interested in an Open Source development approach, so I told them I wasn't interested in contributing.

    Mostly they cited fears of data-subversion by hacked clients. As has been mentioned in other comments, there are ways around this, and in the long run I think they're worth the extra effort. Security through obscurity only keeps the honest people out.

    I think they still don't understand the benifits of open development. In my original contact with them, it didn't feel like a rational decision, and I've seen little evidence they've improved in this respect.
    This was something that always bugged me about d.net, too--they wanted my cpu, not my involvement.

    Sad, since I'm sure it would have been finished sooner. The basic engine seemed to be complete at the time. I think server funding was part of what held them up, but still.

  121. anybody figured out the encoding? by rillian · · Score: 1

    Fabulous idea--too bad the data's encoded.

    Looks sort of like uuencoding, but I've not managed to parse it yet. Any ideas?

  122. Oh yeah, this is great. I can see disaster coming by calags · · Score: 1

    "Mars needs women!!!"

    Leonard

    --
    Never attribute to stupidity what can be construed as a monopoly preservation tactic.
  123. Warning, will NOT go thru firewall.. by calags · · Score: 1

    The FAQ for the client states that it only uses HTTP as a protocol and should have no issues with a firewall. If I read this correctly this means it should be able to use a proxy as well as work if you have a masqueraded network. Of course, I haven't tried this yet but will do as soon as I can.

    Leonard

    --
    Never attribute to stupidity what can be construed as a monopoly preservation tactic.
  124. They blew off their original developers. by Armhold · · Score: 1

    Well this one, at least. About a year ago I volunteered to write the X11 screensaver for them. They agreed, and portioned off the project to me. Then when I needed to correspond with them concerning technical details they never answered their mail; it was as if I didn't exist to them. I also had some concerns with their code regarding portability to various Unix flavors, and I volunteered to write autoconf scripts for them. This too fell on deaf ears.

    Now suddenly the clients are available. I was very eager to be a part of this and contribute code, but they seem to have quietly shifted projects to other developers, and left the originals in the cold. What's the deal? I very badly wanted to run these clients on several of my boxes, but now I'm not sure how I feel about this project. Has anyone else fallen into their email black-hole?

  125. add on to Xscreensaver by Armhold · · Score: 1

    Not a bad idea. If you plan to do this, I recommend you create a module for Xscreensaver. This is how I had planned to do the screensaver for them before they went silent.

  126. Where's the screensaver? by Armhold · · Score: 1

    Please see my comment above (they blew off their developers.) So maybe it wasn't written afterall. I just assumed that they handed it off to someone else.

  127. Not a student. by Armhold · · Score: 1

    No, I'm a professional research programmer. And I would have been fine if they found someone better suited to the task, had they at least answered my email to tell me so. But I did not know about Sun's involvement- it may have been a factor. Thank you for mentioning that.

  128. purdy grafix by wavey · · Score: 1

    There are several factors in play here which should lead to an X11 graphical display being produced eventually:

    a) More workunits are being processed by unix than other 'OSs' - why only provide the pretty graphics for a minority of users?

    b) A sizeable percentage of those unix users (esp. linux) are able to program and may offer their services to the project

    c) The unix people could collectively withhold their cycles until their demands are met :)

  129. This looks like fun, but... by Amiga+User · · Score: 1

    Although I agree it would hurt d.net stats with more and more powerful
    proceesors around it shoudnt be to bad also if like me you have access
    to mor then one machine you could fust run the new client on one m/c.
    We must search for E/T life, it is the one thing that could unite
    the planet

  130. Distibuted.net's day is passing... by Amiga+User · · Score: 1

    The whole point of the 64 bit encryption is that 64 bit is used for
    all the millary and govenment encryption, when we crack the 64 bit
    encryption it is going to get all the governments and companys in the
    world extremely worried. Then when that happens we have a go ayt 128
    bit. The exercise is to keep these organisations on their toes and not
    to give them an easy time

  131. Ok does anyone SEE the win32 client? by MikeTurk · · Score: 1
    It's here. Well, actually it's not, but you can give your e-mail address to be notified when it's released later this month.

    And it looks so nifty!!

    Mike
    --

    --

    Mike
    --
    "Wi nøt trei a høliday in Sweden this yër?"

  132. search for intelligence? by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

    Calibrate the zero-level by pointing dish at Redmond!

  133. not that great by mplex · · Score: 1

    What's so cool about it. There are no graphics, a big drawback if you want to see whats going on. Plus, the code is not parallel. There is no source so we can't toy with it. I don't know, I just hope the windows version runs under wine...

  134. cat work_unit.txt > /dev/audio by mplex · · Score: 1

    Topic says it all

  135. gnome client by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

    Four,
    if your interested, I can pass you the Win code and you can get an idea of the class structure and inner workings. Don't try to port it though...its about 9 months old and it's MFC!:0>

    --
    Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
  136. Never any source code for these things. Why? by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

    Actually the source for the SETI@HOME project was available over a year ago if you registered as a volunteer developer. I have 3 different version of the Windows client laying around my PC. If you contact the director, you may be able to get an older version, or even the latest version. The screen shot of the new version looks 100 times better than the version I hacked away on.

    I wonder if they have a KDE or GNOME version yet (hehe)?

    --
    Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
  137. I'm scared. by Stalke · · Score: 1

    Check the listing for top users. One guy has an average time per work group of 10.3 seconds. It took me 4 hours to do one. He's running it one something VERY nice..

    --
    -?-
  138. One comment by Stalke · · Score: 1

    Current activity of my box. Goodbye distributed.net, hello sETi.

    --
    -?-
  139. Sounds great, but... by vitaflo · · Score: 1

    Erroneous data will be ignored. If a match is found, the chunk of data sent to that machine will be tested by SETI itself to make sure there are no false reports. So while it may be possible to send back faulty data, with all the double checking that will go on, actually fooling them is basically impossible.

    -B

  140. We don't need this by vitaflo · · Score: 1
    There is no chance that people are going to find alien life this way - so why bother.

    A wise man once told me:

    If you try something the answer may be no, but if you don't try, the answer is no. Those two words make a world of difference.

  141. Great. Just What we need. NOT by mgscheue · · Score: 1

    I'd be curious to know how you define "pseudoscience". By my understanding of the term, this meets none of the criteria.

    BTW, Carl Sagan was a CSICOP fellow and his enthusiasm for SETI projects is well-known.

    Mark

  142. They blew off their original developers. by Sixpack · · Score: 1

    It is very possible that Sun offered some resources and personnel ( or their employees offered to help). Unfortunately, in that case, they may have chosen professionals rather than a student (I'm assuming that is what you are).

    In one respect, it was very unprofessional for them not to respond. On the other hand, a proven professional offering to code vs. a student is a wise business decision. (Considering their limited private funding)

    My $.02

  143. Ok does anyone SEE the win32 client? by Sixpack · · Score: 1

    Definitely beta testers. I'm as anxious as the next person...

  144. Debian package? by austad · · Score: 1

    You don't need a debian package. Just grab the tar and run the executable contained in it.

    The nice thing about having it as a tar is that you don't need to be root on a machine to install it. You can just drop the executable in your home directory and run it. (You really don't have to be root to get the files out a .deb either, but you do need to be root to use the debian package manager to install stuff in the default place).

    --
    Need Free Juniper/NetScreen Support? JuniperForum
  145. Do We Win a Prize if we find Aliens ? by Mozart · · Score: 1

    How about this, if we find Alien Life, the prize will be one Lustful and Steamy night with Jody Foster. I'll put all my p-450's to work asap :-)

  146. This looks like fun, but... by Cowards+Anonymous · · Score: 1

    I think there's a big deterrent to the vast majority of folks who would run this: it'll hurt their d.net stats!

    There are now several worthy causes to donate idle CPU to. I hope soon there will be more. I want to be bewildered by choices!

  147. IT is available by The+Iconoclast · · Score: 1
    look at the bottom of the page,
    i686-pc-linux-[glibc|libc5|static]

    Yes, it runs on my P54C

    -- A wealthy eccentric who marches to the beat of a different drum. But you may call me "Noodle Noggin."

    --
    Quando Omni Flunkus Moritati
  148. Get your facts straight, will ya? :-) by Jburkholder · · Score: 1

    Are you sure about that? I could swear I read a while ago that it would. That anyone who had http trough a proxy would be able to use this.

    sure here it is! (from their FAQ)

    Are there any issues concerning the SETI@home software and firewalls?

    SETI@home uses the HTTP protocol, and should work through any firewall that allows outgoing Web traffic.

    http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/faq.html

  149. well, it works here fine (linux firewall) by Jburkholder · · Score: 1

    I have a linux box (486) that just does masquerading for my machines at home here, I just fired up setiathome on my PII450 box and it connected thru my firewall fine, so I'm happy. :-)

  150. This must become open source by Jburkholder · · Score: 1

    well, duh... read the faq, it says they will have to verify the hit by analyzint the data themselves. Do you think they will announce they found ET when Johnny cracks the code and starts sending false positives?

    I don't think so...

    (not that I disagree that it would be nice to get the source, just don't follow the argument)

  151. recursiveness by mistabobdobalina · · Score: 1

    unless, of course, YOU are wrong.

    --
    -- your knees hurt, don't they?
  152. Finally! I've been waiting for this for months! by nosaj · · Score: 1
    Nuh-uh! Looking for primes is pretty cool, I say. At least we have proof that the primes are out there! :-)

    Besides, I can think of a lot of things I could do with a cool $50,000!

    Then again, I'm a math nerd, so I'd be looking for primes anyway. Hey, I think I see one now...

  153. get real by Jeremiah+Savage · · Score: 1

    O come on. People aren't going to be running their own unique hacked version of the client. We just want an open development environment so the software can be improved. There will be "official" releases that everyone uses from the main web site, just like every other free/open project (kernel, gnome, kde, etc.).

  154. Too Cool! by Lionette · · Score: 1

    The same server I'm using to post book reviews of science fiction is now processing SETI data. There's something so perfectly enclosed about that!

    --
    -- Micah Lionette
  155. Oh yeah, this is great. I can see disaster coming by Madhatter · · Score: 1

    Ok, this is great and all, but what happens one day when a well-written macro virus reverse engineers that big ass satellite and beams all of the internet porn to some life form out there? Intelligent or not, I'm sure they are going to have something to say back.

    --
    Madhatter --It's no wonderland out there.
  156. But not through this firewall.... by Madhatter · · Score: 1

    Heh, I'll tackle that one after work. Don't want the firewall guys coming after my ass. I push it buy coming here all the time.

    --
    Madhatter --It's no wonderland out there.
  157. �I can see disaster coming? by Madhatter · · Score: 1

    The last great vestige of free porn! We have lost on the internet, but we still have the final frontier, Space!
    Jeez :)
    Humanity 2000
    What do you want to defile next?

    --
    Madhatter --It's no wonderland out there.
  158. History books by Omar+Djabji · · Score: 1

    Hmmmm.... There are infinite primes, but not infinite trees. They can't record who finds all the primes.

    If the universe is infinitly large (is it?) and there is a small chance that each star holds sentient life, then it follows that there must also be infinite planets with inteligent life. You can't record all them either.

    Oh wait, My assumption of infinite universe would mean that we could use infinte planets to grow infinite trees to record the infinte names of people who discover primes and alien life forms. I guess I just defeated my own argument.

    QED.

  159. Oh yeah, this is great. I can see disaster coming by Omar+Djabji · · Score: 1

    Cool, I guess first contact is going to involve cheesy porno jaz music and a grotesque alien life form trying to mount the first lady. I hope this will televised live.

  160. Client problem by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

    We're working on this. About 1/4 % of linux boxes appear to be having this problem. If you can tell us anything and everything about your system (kernel version, [g]libc version, direct connect or modem, what time was it when you last tried, what net address did you try from).

    bugs@setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu

    SETIGuy

  161. Warning, will NOT go thru firewall.. by SETIGuy · · Score: 1


    This is not true for all firewalls. We're still
    working out the kinks. There seem to size restrictions in some firewalls to what the client
    side sends through and http connection. If you
    can tell us what error message you are seeing,
    it may help us fix them.

    bugs@setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu

    SETIGuy

  162. add on to Xscreensaver by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

    Sorry we dropped off the face of the planet. (Actually I wasn't involved at that point, but am a recent addistion to the team. We plan to have an Xscreensaver module available before too long. The shared memory routines exist in the source tree. I'm hoping the structure of the shared memory segment will be made available at the same time, so alternative views can be created. That's contingent on getting someone to write an understandable explanation of what's in there.

    (Actually I pushed to have the SHM segment active in this version, but lost the battle with management. I also tried pushing open source for a while, but that's another story.)

    SETIGuy

  163. unobtrusive? nope.. (Well maybe) by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

    Well, the Win32 Seti@Home client by default runs only as a screen saver. It uses about 20 MB RAM
    and runs under the idle priority class. I wouldn't worry too much about it overwhelming an
    FTP server on a machine with 64+ Mb. It does take about some swap when it's not running. On a slow machine there is a delay when the screen saver switches off.

    If you have a fast machine you have the option of running in the background. Windows priorities being what they are, I wouldn't recommend it for anyone with less than a PII 233. I hardly notice it on a PII 400.

    --
    SETIGuy

  164. then how to stop people sniffing your HTTP link? by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

    We don't. We do incorporate a small security measure to verify the result. We also have test
    work units that get sent out occasionally. In order to really fake an extraterrestrial signal the perpetrator would need to understand what we do with the results after we get them.

    We're actually more worried that someone will change the signal detection threshold by a factor of two than we are that someone will send us fake results. For the results to be statistically meaningful, all the data need to be analyzed with the same parameter set.

    SETIGuy

  165. anybody figured out the encoding? by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

    I've actually got a program that converts these
    things to ".au" format. I'll ask if I can release
    the source for that.

    Unfortunately, it won't be very exciting. They basically sound like static. (No suprise there.) Even ones with signals 1000 times our detection threshold sound like static. (After all, if we could detect signals by listening to them would we need 350,000 computers to analyze them?)

    SETIGuy

  166. Great. Just What we need. NOT by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

    Feel free to start a distributed computing project to map the masses in the solar system. But wait, don'tyou need lots of telescopes to do that? And don't they cost money? Comparatively, SETI@Home is
    free. The hardware exists, and is available for use. We unobtrusively reside on the Arecibo Radio telescope taking data while other observations are going on. Is there a way this is applicable to finding masses in the solar system and tracking them?

    SETIGuy
    (Also a CSICOP supporter)

  167. No client for i[34]86? by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

    Well, the i586 and i686 correspond to the processor and kernel that the code was compiled on. The code is compiled with whatever GCC the developer has. Chances are better than really good that the i686 version will run unaltered on an i386.

    SETIGuy

  168. These are new people by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

    I found your post very amusing. Basically the problem in the early days was lack of management time. We were all volunteers with over full-time comittments elsewhere. By the time we got a decent handle on the management issues we were a few months to the promised delivery date of the Windows client. So yes, we broke down and hired programmers who could give us 80 hours a week for the little time we had left.

    As far as NDAs, we don't have NDAs. We have the word of our programmers that they won't let the source out. We're keeping the source because the results are pretty much meaningless unless we know all the data was analyzed using the same method. Enhancements could screw up the science pretty badly.

    And as far as commercial software goes, you've got to be kidding! Who the hell would pay to do this? I certainly wouldn't.

    SETIGuy

  169. cat > /dev/audio only works with raw data by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

    You'll be disappointed, but you can figure the
    sample size from the size of the work unit and
    the number of samples (given in the header).

    They're actually 2 bit samples. We're actually after frequency resolution not amplitude resolution. Unfortunately, I don't think the samples are in time order in the work unit due to limitations of the recording system and its intrinsic word size. Not that it matters, it'll still sound like static.

    SETIGuy

  170. Debian package? by montezuma · · Score: 1

    Has anyone asked about doing a .deb for the
    client? It'd open up the number of Debian users who have spare cycles

  171. Debian package -Yes but? by montezuma · · Score: 1

    Yes & that's just what I done (although it doesn't
    know didly sqoo about proxies so I can't run
    it on most of my machines).

    My point was more that having a .deb would make
    it visible to sysadmins - who by and large have
    the larger. more powerful boxes. Plus some nice
    init.d scripts to kick off at boot time, etc
    etc...

  172. purdy grafix by Aureth · · Score: 1

    As clients for 'other OSs' haven't been publically released yet, point A is mostly moot. ;P

  173. Proxy (was: Warning, will NOT go thru firewall..) by fred · · Score: 1

    Try setting $http_proxy to 'http://my_proxy_server:3128/' (or whatever the appropriate port is). Most programs that have proxy support observe the http_proxy environment variable.

  174. gnome client by four · · Score: 1

    :P~~
    that sounds like a fun project :>
    maybe i can get the source from these guys somehow.

    --
    -- four
  175. SMP by Detroit · · Score: 1

    will seti@home support smp? The only way I see how to get the other processor used is to run another copy of setiathome.

    d

    --
    ... .. . . . http://group227.com
  176. This must become open source by tarcus · · Score: 1
    It's more a case of not reporting a genuine positive. What if someone decodes a signal reading "Hey dumb humans, over here! We're going to eat you!" but their hacked client barfs the message in a frenzy of buffer overruns, no-one will ever know that the message was there.

    If someone twigs that this has happened, how will they then figure out which signal yielded the positive result?

    Basically, testing that a result is correct is easy, it's when the correct result isn't put forward that the sh*t hits the fan.

    --

    --
    There are no facts, only opinions
  177. Distibuted.net's day is passing... by phil+reed · · Score: 2

    Distributed.net set out to prove something, and it succeeded. Since then, it's been proved again and again, most recently with EEF's dedicated cracker. Working on RC64 is now just flogging an expired equine. It's just not going to make the kind of political statement that RC56 made.

    As far as a tool set, d.net had a chance to get their distributed engine out, but they seem to have missed their window. Now, we've got several dedicated distributed efforts going, and d.net is rapidly turning into a fading blip.

    My only question is to figure out which machines to switch over from doing primes. Find a new prime, get your name in the history books (well, the math history books). Find a new civilization, get your name in the real history books forever.


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  178. Holy VM usage! by heroine · · Score: 2

    At 13 megs don't expect to run this client except for bedtime. Don't expect to find extraterrestrial life until 13 meg level 2 caches come along either. Since it's still better than trying to crack passwords, I'll probably dump the rc5 client for a while.

  179. The surest sign that intelligent life exists... by heroine · · Score: 2

    The surest sign that intelligent life exists is that it hasn't tried to contact us.

  180. Sounds great, but... by broken · · Score: 2

    There's something that worries me about this. There will probably be some kind of stats or rankings, and people will compete to get to the top. That's fine, but what if somebody develops a client that just drops the blocks so they can get to the top of that list? I heard something like that was developed for rc5.

    This is not just an encryption contest, and much more is at stake. I would hate for it to be ruined just by a bunch of stupid people.

  181. Never any source code for these things. Why? by Ray+Dassen · · Score: 2
    My guess is that having the source for it would greatly increase the capacity of malevolents to send fake or distorted results back.

    I wish I knew of a good counterargument. Suggestions?

  182. Better than cracking RC5 by Freshman · · Score: 2

    I've been watching SETI@Home for a while and have been dying to download the client. Sure, its fun to chip away at RC5, but we all know that RC5 64 bit will eventually be cracked given time.

    With SETI@Home, you can use your idle time for something that may have a greater purpose down the road.

    Bottom line is, brute force will eventually crack encryption. Woohoo. Increase the bits. Now that this new idea has come along, you have a chance to aid the search for intelligent life.

    And that my friends, is a big deal.

    --

    ----------
    "They misunderestimated me." --George W Bush, Nov. 6, 2000
  183. Searching Radio signals for signs of intelligence? by Cadaver · · Score: 2

    They'll be lucky! I have enough trouble finding signs of intelligence searching the FM band. I shudder to think how much worse it would be at a non-radio station frequency!

    --
    I ate something that disagreed with me. Maybe I should have cooked him first.
  184. unobtrusive? by fixe · · Score: 2

    I am interested in doing this but i could not find any info on the site as to whether the screensaver version for win32 would be unobtrusive with other applications running in the background like say an FTP server. I would assume it is but... then again....