Message boards :
SETI@home Science :
Has Seti@Home ever found anything?
Message board moderation
Author | Message |
---|---|
Zephirus Send message Joined: 22 May 06 Posts: 2 Credit: 9,862 RAC: 0 |
Ive been running this on multiple computers for a few months now. While I dont mind running it, it does raise the concern if anyone has actually found ANYTHING at all other than just static or noise. Does seti@home program alert you when it finds something or what? Just curious. |
1mp0£173 Send message Joined: 3 Apr 99 Posts: 8423 Credit: 356,897 RAC: 0 |
Ive been running this on multiple computers for a few months now. While I dont mind running it, it does raise the concern if anyone has actually found ANYTHING at all other than just static or noise. Does seti@home program alert you when it finds something or what? They haven't found anything terribly interesting (anything clearly of intelligent origin). That said, the sky is mind-bogglingly big, and we'd have to be "listening" at the same time "ET" is sending. Once they have found something, I'm sure the word will go out in a big way. |
ML1 Send message Joined: 25 Nov 01 Posts: 21171 Credit: 7,508,002 RAC: 20 |
...if anyone has actually found ANYTHING at all other than just static or noise... Oooooooooo... They've found LOTs of things, but not ET yet. If anything is found, it will be carefully verified. Berkeley will then notify those with the WUs that have made the detection. The biggest problem is to avoid hyping up a false positive. There would be a media frenzy to be followed by an awful embarrasingly hard crash. For myself, s@h is as interesting for all the "spinoffs" as it is for SETI itself. Happy crunchin', Martin See new freedom: Mageia Linux Take a look for yourself: Linux Format The Future is what We all make IT (GPLv3) |
Aurora Borealis Send message Joined: 14 Jan 01 Posts: 3075 Credit: 5,631,463 RAC: 0 |
One has to remember that the search for Seti, although a very sexy project for getting the populace involved in volunteering their spare CPU cycles for science, is at very best a long shot when it comes to detecting any signal from ET. It was and still is at it's most basic level an experiment in distributed computing. This project has been very successful at proving that it is possible to create and maintain a supercomputer with desktop computers. Seti has proven itself capable of sustaining the interest of hundreds of thousands of people. The bigger challenge is getting these same people involved in other less sexy (dare I say dull) and also financially challenged branches of basic research that have a much better chance of more directly impacting and improving our lives in the long and near term. This is, to me, the main purpose of developing the Boinc software itself. Boinc V7.2.42 Win7 i5 3.33G 4GB, GTX470 |
zombie67 [MM] Send message Joined: 22 Apr 04 Posts: 758 Credit: 27,771,894 RAC: 0 |
Coincidentally, the Science channel is re-broadcasting Cosmos, and last night was the episode about searching for ET, _Encyclopedia_Galactica_. Great shots of Arecibo, and he goes into actually putting down numbers to the chances of intelligent life in this galaxy. They showed the program to my class back in grade school, on these great big honkin' cassette tapes. I was completely captivated. Aside from the new-age music, it holds up pretty good! Dublin, California Team: SETI.USA |
KD [SETI.USA] Send message Joined: 24 Oct 99 Posts: 460 Credit: 2,513,131 RAC: 0 |
Ive been running this on multiple computers for a few months now. While I dont mind running it, it does raise the concern if anyone has actually found ANYTHING at all other than just static or noise. Does seti@home program alert you when it finds something or what? Well, listening "at the right time", not at the same time. Ok. I'm nitpicking and am sure you already knew that. :-) The way I see something unfolding would be along the lines of: - Something interesting is found and doesn't appear to be caused by any /known/ natural phenomena. ...and, if the "find", is able to be repeated: - SETI@home tries to follow same protocol as the SETI Institute (not the same organization) as best as possible: http://www.seti.org/site/pp.asp?c=ktJ2J9MMIsE&b=179287 - No "information" is ever extracted from the "signal", despite attempts to consider every possible /known/ way to modulate, encode, etc. - Theories are brought forth on how natural phenomena could have created the signal. - It becomes continuously debated whether the signal was by an intelligence or natural phenomena. (Similar to that Mars meteorite containing "biological fossils".) This is the way science is supposed to work... ...of course, there is always that chance that an ET signal carrying intelligence that is easily extracted by dummies (intended to be found) is possible. After all, we did this ourselves. I'm not holding my breath though. |
Toki Wartooth Send message Joined: 3 Nov 06 Posts: 3 Credit: 12,477 RAC: 0 |
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5793453751420599744&hl=en Maybe.... |
Walla Send message Joined: 14 May 06 Posts: 329 Credit: 177,013 RAC: 0 |
SETI is a gamble. But it is an intelligent gamble. Chances for success are low however the possibility is always there. There are set rules to follow if a signal is found. I can't find the link now but I do know that the signal has to be confirmed by at least 2 radio observatories. |
KD [SETI.USA] Send message Joined: 24 Oct 99 Posts: 460 Credit: 2,513,131 RAC: 0 |
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." - Carl Sagan "Where's the beef?" - The old woman in the old Wendy's commercial I knew nothing about Steven Greer until I saw him mentioned in a post on here recently. Trying to be objective, I went to read a little more about him. From what I have gathered, this isn't the first time he has made claims about something to be unveiled Any-Minute-Now, nor has he ever provided any hard evidence for any of his claims. Like all other modern snake-oil charlatans, all he has to offer are anecdotes and blurry pictures. His forte' seems to be distort casual conversations into ways to meet his agenda. He also embarrassed himself quite a bit years ago when he came up with a story about how US troops had attacked an alien base in Colorado with nerve gas. Even the tabloids found that one too far fetched. The guy is a scam. Below is a letter from James Woolsey to Steven Greer. -- Dear Dr. Greer: It has just come to the attention of the four of us that you have, without giving any of us the opportunity to comment, published a distorted account of a dinner party of some six years ago at which the four of us, you, and your wife were seated together. In the Introduction to your book, Extraterrestrial Contact, published earlier this year you portray this dinner party conversation during which the four of us listened to your views and politely asked questions as a "briefing" with a "cover story." You further assert that Mr. and Mrs. Woolsey reported a UFO sighting to you and agreed with your views. You include specific alleged quotations from them. None of this is accurate. You have portrayed politeness as acquiescence and questions as affirmations. Your conduct in this matter contravenes both accuracy and simple manners. Sincerely, John L. Petersen Diane C. Petersen R. James Woolsey Suzanne H. Woolsey --------- |
Walla Send message Joined: 14 May 06 Posts: 329 Credit: 177,013 RAC: 0 |
|
Talonn Send message Joined: 3 Apr 99 Posts: 1 Credit: 2,801,268 RAC: 0 |
Ive been running this on multiple computers for a few months now. While I dont mind running it, it does raise the concern if anyone has actually found ANYTHING at all other than just static or noise. Does seti@home program alert you when it finds something or what? This is interesting |
Enigma Send message Joined: 15 Mar 06 Posts: 628 Credit: 21,606 RAC: 0 |
Forget the disclosure project, or even the diffictultity in finding a repeated sequenced signal of some kind (singifying an ETI transmission) the data that is being collected and crunched is not being analysed for 'interesting candidate signals'. i.e. no data analysis for candidate signals has been done since 2002! Candidate Signals There are currently no plans to do any! Why? i hear you ask... well don't ask you may not like the answer. Just Keep Crunching! <Blindermode ON> Enigma. Belief gets in the way of learning |
Calculator Send message Joined: 30 Sep 06 Posts: 62 Credit: 69,529 RAC: 0 |
thats what I think as well. I mean no matter what you do, cancer research, or seti or whatever. you kannot be 100% sure that the results are used for humanity-stuff |
KD [SETI.USA] Send message Joined: 24 Oct 99 Posts: 460 Credit: 2,513,131 RAC: 0 |
Ive been running this on multiple computers for a few months now. While I dont mind running it, it does raise the concern if anyone has actually found ANYTHING at all other than just static or noise. Does seti@home program alert you when it finds something or what? "The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark" This book should be a required high school reading as it encourages critical thinking while unmasking pseudoscience. ...and thats all that this Steven Greer has to offer: pseudoscience, (distorted) anecdotes, and blurry pictures. To date, there is no hard, peer-reviewed, and widely confirmed evidence of life off the Earth. (Some of the test results from the Viking landers, along with that Mars meteorite, are very intriguing though.) As much as I believe, as most do I'm sure, that life most certainty should exist elsewhere -- I know this just a belief. As a belief, it is without warrant -- regardless of any warm fuzzy feelings. Semi-related, but illustrating critical thinking: Recently, I went looking at some of the "UFO" pictures out there on the internet and was extremely disappointed. There wasn't a single photograph taken that made me even remotely consider it being from extraterrestrial intelligence. Almost all of them are blurry. Even current pictures, when we have digital cameras, are as blurry as a 1970's Welcome Back Kotter episode. The photographer will say that the photo is blurry because it was taken in the heat of the moment. If I see an airliner flying above my house (at cruise altitude), I can quickly run inside to grab my camera and take a photo of it. I can them download that picture to my computer and zoom into the airliner. Zooming in with software, the airliner, while flying at 30,000 feet, is clearly visible as an aircraft. You can make out the wings, engines, tail that weren't visible to the naked eye. ...but, ET in his flying saucer, hovering directly above a corn field 200 yards away, always comes out blurry? Give me a break. |
Dr. C.E.T.I. Send message Joined: 29 Feb 00 Posts: 16019 Credit: 794,685 RAC: 0 |
< Time has come again . . . "Understanding the ETI Messages and Replying Appropriately" Draft Declaration of Principles Concerning Sending Communications with Extraterrestrial Intelligence 1.International consultations should be initiated to consider the question of sending Proposed by the SETI Commitee of the International Academy of Astronautics, 1995 . . . persons with relevant knowledge © The SETI League, Inc. 2003 |
LeeRoyChang Send message Joined: 7 Sep 05 Posts: 4 Credit: 127,632 RAC: 0 |
Unfortunately, unless you watch your screen saver throughout the entire time you are running the programe you will not be certain that you have found anything. if anything was found, it is hardly likely that the discoverer, you, will be informed despite the rules and regulations that state that legally you must be informed. if you kick up and say that you did indeed find something, it will simply be put down that it was a relected signal, or a non-repeatable event. incidently, i use a canon 350D with a EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM lens with which i have 4 clear, precise photos of a hovering object which looks unlike anything of this Earth. clear photos are simply not published due to officials classifying the images. |
Johnney Guinness Send message Joined: 11 Sep 06 Posts: 3093 Credit: 2,652,287 RAC: 0 |
In October 2004, I had a workunit under Seti@Home 3.08 that produced a strong line a little to the left of the middle of the scale. The workunit may have run for 5 seconds and then exited. Later I have played a downloaded .avi file (for Windows Media Player) on my PC which shows the famous "WOW" signal. There are a lot of similarities, I think, although I do not have this file as well as other files anymore because of a disc failure. fjernhode, Yep, thats them Aliens alright! Here, This is the link as a URL http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-163352743368759494&q=2+UFO's+on+patrol Click reply to this thread and you will see how to bring up your links as click URL's John in Ireland. |
Riffrafter Send message Joined: 12 Jan 04 Posts: 14 Credit: 37,113 RAC: 0 |
What? I don't know about everyone else, but I'm not doing this for "credits" or to see how many data units my machine can crunch. I've been wondering where the "science" was since I started back in doing this a few weeks ago. Unless I've missed something, the only info regarding results (good, bad or indifferent) isn't even on the new web site, and is years old. That's pretty pathetic. If SETI isn't going to analyze the data, and start posting some current info on what's been found (or not), then I really don't have much interest in continuing to participate. I mean - for what? To improve my RAC numbers? What a joke... Does anyone have any info on SETI's plans to start publicly sharing some information here regarding the status of the "science" of what we're all supposed to be working on? |
©2024 University of California
SETI@home and Astropulse are funded by grants from the National Science Foundation, NASA, and donations from SETI@home volunteers. AstroPulse is funded in part by the NSF through grant AST-0307956.