Seti@Home Now Has Teams 196
Madoc writes "Was just over at Seti@Home's site, and saw that they've introduced teams now! There are 2 Slashdot teams, we should probably standardize on one:
Slashdot.org
and
Team Slashdot "
I vote for Team Slashdot. Go seek out new intelligence if
this rocks your boat better than cracking DES keys.
Re:Which is more useful? (OGR is here, now!) (Score:1)
http://members.aol.com/golomb20 [aol.com]
Re:Seti not as important (Score:1)
Re:Interface (Score:1)
Re:7 minutes (Score:1)
running Windows NT server. They always
to be so blisteringly fast.
Actually you can run SETI@home on several
machines provided you have the same login
on each machine (see the SETI@home FAQ)
Look, that's NOT IT. (Score:1)
But that's not the point
What we're saying is that the NSA doesn't
nessessarly have a log of systems administrator
snitches out there, and cracking into 1000's of systems
is a lot more work than just getting some zelous geeks
to install some software on thier own systems that
will give them the "backdoor" into them to snoop around
automagically. Then encript the data for them alone to analyze at thier leasure.
cheating teams is far to easy (Score:1)
I wonder why team slashdot has all the top users that have their email visible?
holy loophole batman
Re:7 minutes average CPU time? (Score:1)
Re:Usefulness (Score:2)
Re:Seti account maintenance (Score:2)
All that said, the SETI project does stand to yield something more useful, at least psychologically -- the time spent beating on RC5 has mainly (and successfully) demonstrated that DES-56 sucks, and that bigger keys are vastly harder to break. If there came another rapid DES-breaking project such as DES-II or DES-III, I'd happily switch my spare CPU cycles back to it for a day or two.
Also, the source to seti@home isn't available, a problem which they have yet to rectify. If they desperately need to protect the algorithm for scientific integrity, they can move all that to a library and open the rest of the source so that we can fix the missing parts.
Overclocked 300A--the end of life as we know it? (Score:2)
Five years later, an alien demolition team wipes out the entire Milky Way to make room for an interstellar frontage road, a procedure that they had advertised (via radio beacon) for millenia. All life on Earth perishes because of an overclocked 300A, whereas if Joe Celery had not overclocked his chip, humanity would have made first contact with an alien race and Joe Celery's name would go down in the history books.
Now wouldn't that just suck?
Cheating the SETI Team System / Poor Security (Score:2)
Let's say you want to add Michael Dolan (top individual user by miles) to your team. You get his email address (which is clearly displayed in the top 100 individual list) and change the logon in your Winbloze client to this email address. The user info in the client display will now tell you that you are Michael Dolan.
Now look in the program directory for "user_data.txt" or some such. Open it up and look for the "key" value. This is Michael Dolan's password! Bingo, you now have his email and his "password" - add him to any team you like, or all of them if you want! Wanna have more fun, add the top Big companies to a team, or Berkeley themselves! Ha ha!
Distributed password in plain text format? How STUPID is that?
Speed on Windows systems (Score:3)
1. The statistics for CPU time for Windows 9x include the time it is staying minimized in a System Tray doing nothing.
2. To speed up processing time in Windows 9x dramatically (about 3x in my experience), turn on screen blanking in the screen saver properties.
Re: Seti account maintenance is coming (Score:4)
-Peter of the SETI@home team
Re:Speed Comparison (Score:4)
Re:Speed Comparison (Score:1)
I've left the window up, but not frontmost and it still is displaying graphics, so who knows how reliable that is. But I think when it's minimized it doesn't run, or is terribly slowed down.
Haha (Score:1)
Re:Yup, that's paranoid (Score:1)
Now, I'm not positive, but I think that zip code probably cooresponds to a certain base (fort?) in Maryland.
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Yup, that's paranoid (Score:2)
- A $60,000 machine built by the EFF beat out all
the King's horses and all the King's men
(otherwise known as distributed.net).
- The NSA probably would have considered Deep
Crack (the EFF's key buster) a keen and useful
computer -- twenty years ago.
So, unless you've got some really serious reason to think otherwise, I'd stop worrying about a few bits from SETI, take my medication and start looking for little green men like a good little member of the Collective. Besides, there are better things out there to worry about, like the war in Kosovo or a 1 cent increase in the price of a stamp.
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Re:Yup, that's paranoid (Score:1)
Closed != secure (Score:2)
Re:SETI is absolutely more important!! (Score:1)
It's also not impossible that all the air molecules in the room will jump against one wall, leaving you in a vacuum to suffocate. However, the odds are against it, and most of us firmly believe the odds are against their being only one intelligence in the universe.
...phil
Personal Proxy for SETI@Home (Score:1)
If they make one, third party stats scripts will come. I promise it.
SETI is absolutely more important!! (Score:1)
InET is participating in the SETI@Home project. We Think that SETI is the most important activity of the last months, because is'nt only about the people colaboration for an "invented" project...is the people colaboration for a very USEFUL project.
Imagine that human race discover an extraterrestrial civilization...With the people's work SETI is very near of that purpose.
Re:Usefulness (Score:1)
Maybe I'm missing something terribly important about them, but I don't see anything at all important about finding large prime numbers.
Somebody shed a little light on this, perhaps?
Re:Speed Comparison (Score:1)
My beige PowerMac G3 at 266 MHz with 32 megabytes of memory just took a week to complete its first work unit, and the CPU time counter racked up "only" around 70 hours. Something is badly wrong.
In addition, when I tried to have it contact the server this morning, it managed to send its results back, but then refused time and time again to retrieve any new data. I switched it back to guessing RC5 keys, at 850 kkeys/sec.
By comparison, my Linux box, a 300 MHz AMD K6-2 with 96 megabytes of memory, goes through work units in about 16 hours.
I think I'm using the i386-glibc2.1 binary on there. Should I try to the i686 binary instead? I don't understand which processor model (386, 486, Pentium, PPro) is right for the K6-2.
Re:Speed Comparison (Score:1)
Other than when I fire up Quicken [intuit.com], I've let it run as the foreground (and only) application and turned off all screensavers and other power-down features. I haven't tried moving it out of the System folder though. I'll try that.
Re:Interface (Score:2)
search for XSETI, it's a GTK GUI for Seti@Home
Philosophic Question ... (Score:1)
(and do you win $10000 in Alpha Centauri duckets?)
Usefulness (Score:1)
-Ben
Re:Intelligent Life (Score:1)
Re:So..... Where's Team Linux? (Score:1)
Re:cheating teams is far to easy (Score:1)
If SETI@Home wanted decent, high-performance code, anyone reading this board could do that, but not with our hands tied.
Yes you can (Score:1)
Re:Speed Comparison (Score:1)
I'm running NT5 SP5 on a Compaq PII machine. THREE DAYS PER SODDING WORK UNIT!
If Linux gets it down to one, I might not have pulled all the hair out of my head by the end of the week!
Re:Illegal submissions? (Score:1)
Re:Maybe I'm parnanoid... (Score:1)
Illegal submissions? (Score:1)
Re:Seti not as important (Score:1)
Re:Usefulness (Score:5)
Re:Speed Comparison (Score:1)
Re:Speed Comparison (Score:1)
So..... Where's Team Linux? (Score:1)
Re:Overclocked 300A--the end of life as we know it (Score:2)
Intelligent Life (Score:2)
I would rather look for intelligent life elsewhere, but I think it is more urgent to look for it here first.
Re:Yup, that's paranoid (Score:2)
However, given that the NSA has a track record for being ahead of the academic field of cryptography (ie. they discovered linear(??) cryptanalysis many years before the academic world did)...it would not be entirely unreasonable to claim that they developed a machine similar to Deep Crack before EFF did.
Now, if I remember correctly, Deep Crack is optimized for DES, which in itself is optimized for hardware. I'm not sure how applicable this technology would be to other algorithms, but that's a side issue.
While some of the paranoia about the NSA is certainly unwarrented (NSA != God), it's not unreasonable to believe that they are a few steps ahead of the rest of the world in cryptography.
Maybe I'm parnanoid... (Score:4)
Suppose you're a government agency, and you get hold of some important encrypted data. No problem -- just dump the key into the seti@home processing queue. Instant free cycles from enthusiastic geeks all over the country, of whom many are privacy advocates who've been participating in various distributed cracking challenges over the years in attempts to protest your authoritarian policies. O, sweet irony.
Dan Wineman [mailto]
Join AI's for ET's! (Score:1)
The concept just has a certain perfection to it. ;-)
Join the team here [berkeley.edu]
We joined the Seti-At-Home project two years ago, for what that's worth, but the project itself has only just begun...They have problems with server overload fairly often; please be patient as they figure out how to deal with these typical new-project problems.
My desktop NT box at work slow as fsck. (Score:1)
However my dual pentium 400 with 320M ram running 2.2.5 has crunched out about 50 of them in the same time.
Even my poor P60 with 24 megs of ram is can do one in about a day and a half fast. That is running 2.2.9.
Ken Broadfoot
Ken
Re:Speed Comparison (Score:1)
Re:I vote for Team Slashdot. (Score:1)
Re:Make the damn thing OPEN SOURCE! (Score:1)
Re:Make the damn thing OPEN SOURCE! (Score:1)
I strongly agree that the source for this program should be made available. I won't be running it until I know I have the option (even if I don't exercise it) of knowing what the program is doing.
It doesn't have to be fully free/open source, but at the very least it should be distributed as source.
When you say:
> A RECOMPILED BINARY ON YOUR MACHINE IS A
> VARIABLE. They don't know what tweaks you put
> in it. Therefore, they can't use your results.
You're making assumptions about the client-server model works. In fact you're making assumptions about the source. If *I* was building something like this, I'd make damn sure that there was some form of checking so that *any* data that comes into the server site claiming to have something to say about my data chunk can be quickly spot-checked first, then subjected to more rigourous checking later if it turns out to be needed.
FWIW, I asked the project co-ordinators why they didn't distribute source. I received no reply.
Besides the paranoia angle (NASA=NSA) which I'm not going to discount (because I can't see the code), I would distrust the code on "mere" quality grounds. If it's true that they're not releasing the source because they believe (as this anon coward does) that people will start feeding in erroneous data, then they don't know how to program to handle data, full stop.
No stupid comment is enough to halt the mighty march to open source nirvana
seti@home important? ha! (Score:1)
** Martin
Re:Maybe I'm parnanoid... (Score:1)
Re:Server down, has been down a long time (Score:1)
Stan "Myconid" Brinkerhoff
Re:Results not being sent? (Score:1)
As well as running it on my Linux box (PII 333) which averages 11 something hours per block, I also run it on my PowerMac 8200/100. Its been going for over 135 hours and is on 94% of the first block. This thing eats CPU time. But hey, what the hell else would I use the Mac for?
Re:Usefulness (Score:1)
Re:I vote for Team Slashdot. (Score:1)
Which is more useful? (Score:3)
Re:Does SETI client notify user if it finds someth (Score:1)
-Steve
Re:Yup, that's paranoid (Score:1)
Re:Cheating the SETI Team System / Poor Security (Score:1)
Computers are neeto.
--diva
7 minutes average CPU time? (Score:1)
I see the top member of Team slashdot is Michael Dolan with an average time per block of 9 hr 27 min. OK, he probably has an Alpha or some other fast CPU.
But what is the story with Bert, in the number 5 slot, with an average time per block of 7 min 51 sec? What kind of system cranks through a block 70 times faster than an Alpha?
Team #Amiga! beats Slashdot! (Score:1)
Re:Closed != secure (Score:1)
AtW,
http://www.investigatio.com [investigatio.com]
Re:7 minutes (Score:1)
AtW,
http://www.investigatio.com [investigatio.com]
Re:7 minutes (Score:1)
Re:Usefulness (Score:1)
A better forum for SETI(@home) discussion (Score:5)
We've also got a Team on SETI@home. You can find out info about it, along with tips on optimising your SETI@home client software on the Club Team homepage [zap.to].
Enjoy,
Kris.
Win a Rio [cjb.net] (or join the SETI Club via same link)
High RAM Usage With SETI@Home? (Score:3)
Has anyone else noticed this? I'd like to know to see if it's just me or not. Because if it's not, I can wait for new clients and hope that the RAM usage is less.
Re:Prizes? (Score:1)
It's not $10000, but it's still cool.
peter
Re:Usefulness (Score:2)
That distributed.net will eventually crack the code is a given. All they'll have proven is that it takes a long time to crack RC5, even with lots of computers. There was never any question that it was possible -- just how long it would take. And now we know that it takes a very long time.
SETI, on the other hand, could discover alien intelligence.
Sure, encryption is a very relevant topic. But is distributed.net?
peter
Re:Maybe I'm parnanoid? No source? (Score:5)
But the nice thing about Linux is that you can bolt the program down so tightly (separate user, chroot) so that it cannot do any damage - it'll never find my pornography or any of my other dirty secrets ;-) (hmm, me reaches for the man chroot command anyway)
Having said that I think it's not really feasible for these guys to give out the source code, because it allows malicious people to write something that'll send fake packets back saying "okay - I've found nothing". This would be a grossly irresponsible thing to do but I wouldn't rule out a cheat who would want to bump up the team's "block count" up a little or religious fanatics whose beliefs depend on there being nothing out there. Security through obscurity, perhaps, but I can't think of any other way of protecting against cheats.*
Despite that I'm still a little irked off about it myself as I'm forced to sit behind a non-transparent proxy and twiddle my thumbs with a cluster of about ~16 decent machines that are just itching to join in the search for extraterrestrial life. If only I had the source I could have written that proxy bit myself already!
*By the way it's probably only a matter of time before someone actually reverse engineers the program. Security through obscurity has always ended in tears.
Re:Intelligent Life (Score:1)
I think there is a greater chance of us finding intelligent life in outer space than there is in us finding it here! :)
Re:Speed Comparison (Score:1)
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'We have no choice in what we are. Yet what are we,
but the sum of our choices.' --Rob Grant
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Re:7 minutes is a bug (Score:1)
Presumably the others in the stats with around the same times suffer from the same bug. The setiathome folks should fix the clients and rip out the bad results from the stats. I assume it will happen at some time in the future
TA
Run them twice (Score:1)
TA
Re:7 minutes (Score:1)
Maybe it's the graphical part that is able to multithread (or maybe NT multithreads the graphical part for you), try to turn off the graphics (by setting the screensaver to blank the screen, in the control box). Others report that this cuts the processing time to half, if it doesn't for you but merely unloads a CPU you know what's going on..
TA
Server down, has been down a long time (Score:2)
Try again tomorrow.
TA
Your own proxy: (Score:2)
A netstat shows that the client connects to sagan.ssl.berkeley.edu, and a 'strings' on the binary shows 'shserver.ssl.berkeley.edu' which turns out to be the same as 'sagan' right now.
So just make something that can take the connects from setiathome on port 80, and forward it to shserver.ssl.berkeley.edu port 80 (and the other way). Put this 'something' (which also understands your local proxy system of course) and put it on a computer that looks like 'shserver.ssl.berkeley.edu' for the client, you can do that just by putting a fake entry in the
You can probably do it in Perl.
TA
Re:Yep site seems hosed (Score:1)
on temperature
Re:I vote for Team Slashdot. (Score:3)
Team Slashdot, we find aliens and crash wussy webservers.
Team Sweden (Score:1)
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Re:High RAM Usage With SETI@Home? (Score:1)
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Bug in Team Totals (was Team #Amiga! beats Sla...) (Score:1)
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Re:cheating teams is far to easy (Score:1)
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Re:cheating teams is far to easy (Score:1)
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Re:SETI is absolutely more important!! (Score:1)
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Re:Is this news??? (Score:1)
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Re:7 minutes average CPU time? (Score:1)
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Re:Slashdot effect on Seti@HOME (Score:1)
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Re:Teams are back with new security! (Score:1)
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Re:Results not being sent? (Score:2)
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Re:Which is more useful? (Score:2)
-gleam
Re:Which is more useful? (Score:2)
Acctually there are more 'useful' projects coming up on distributed as well.
The project is about finding 'Optimal Golomb Rulers' [hewgill.com]. More info can be found here [distributed.net].
Speed Comparison (Score:3)
Is the linux client faster? Or are linux users just running faster computers? Maybe it's all the graphics the Win/Mac versions draw that slow them down.
7 minutes (Score:2)
I special hardware involved?
Because the SETI client doesn't multithread in it's current version, that would have to be one honkin' processor. Or a parallelizing compiler.
Seti account maintenance (Score:2)
Gripes aside, I'm still running the client because I think the project is so important.
Results not being sent? (Score:2)
Vrallis
Re:Speed Comparison (Score:3)
Dual PII-350 (winNT sv P4, 512M SDRAM): 10-14 hours Max
Single PII-350 (2.0.36, 128M SDRAM): 8-11 hours Max
I disabled the graphics in Windows and it makes no difference.
Because of that My Boss Ordered RedHat 6.0 !!
woohoo, we going Linux PDC On the dual !! Thanks SETI@home
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