Originally posted by ISV_Damocles So you don't think mapping out places that emit large amounts of radio waves is good for science? While SETI@Home says it's the search for extraterrestrials, that's mainly to get the fringe tin-foil hat wearing types to put up their CPU time.
I am running Seti@home cause I was hoping to discover 3 breasted alien girls that have 2 butt holes, never say no and who like old fat Canadians.
did you realize all your processor-hungry apps got slower? or do you feel your room heating up...
::edit:: me, i've got the elite console version http://www.stanford.edu/group/pandeg...02-Console.exe , thought it runs a tad bit faster when your comptuer doesnt have to worry about some GUI ... im folding for another team already, tho.....so, sorry INA
Originally posted by ISV_Damocles So you don't think mapping out places that emit large amounts of radio waves is good for science? While SETI@Home says it's the search for extraterrestrials, that's mainly to get the fringe tin-foil hat wearing types to put up their CPU time.
SETI@Home has been cataloging the locations and strengths of radiowaves being emitted from almost every part of space viewable by us. The double and triple checking of locations by using distributed computing is more to help remove bad data caused by glitches in the recording system.
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What you do in SETI@Home can't be invalidated
Questions:
A. How is mapping large amounts of radio waves is good for science?
B. How is the strengths of radio waves being emitted from a *Billion Light-Years away from us, important to us now?
C. So the double and triple checking to remove bad data is not invalidated? (whats the point than?)
D. SETI LIES TO US??? (Not really searching for ET, but saying so "to get the fringe tin-foil hat wearing types to put up their CPU time".
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