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| Your personal background. |
Personal background:
### Our history (as of 24-06-04 CET) ###
SETI@home classic name: Cheecha Gleesha SETI Team
Results Received: 41,127
Total CPU Time: 31.791 years
Average CPU Time per work unit: 6 hr 46 min 17.3 sec
Average results received per day: 22.94
Last result returned: Wed Jun 23 21:45:08 2004 UTC
REGISTERED ON: Tue Jul 27 20:58:49 1999 UTC
SETI@home user for: 4.912 years
Your rank out of 5038291 total users is: 2326th place
The number of users who have this rank: 1
You have completed more work units than: 99.954% of our users
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| Your opinions about Einstein@Home |
Questions:
1) Why do you run Einstein@home?
2) What are your views about the project?
3) Any suggestions?
Answers:
1)
We are cheechaGLEESHA. We do not believe in spinning stars. We are doing this only because we like to keep our central processing units under constant strain and stress. And Einstein@home, at the current time, has proved the most adequate tool to do that. We are always aware and are always dreaming of electrons that are inevitably rushing through heavily-overclocked silicone cores of our computer equipment's central processing units. We see them desperately clinging on the edge of thermal collapse every day. And this makes us happy. For that is good.
2)
We have absolutely no views about the project itself, whatsoever. Our primary interest is the Einstein@home client. For it is that creation that causes the electrons to rush through heavily-overclocked silicone cores of our computer equipment's central processing units, heating them and putting them under strain, wear and tear. This, in turn, brings the need for maintenance of our computers. And we lovingly tend to them, so they may continue to give us joy by letting the electrons rush through them, and, in particular, the silicon in the cores of their central processing units.
3)
We would like the next generations of Einstein@home client make use of any additional technologies different computing platforms might provide. These include MMX, extended MMX, 3DNow!, enhanced 3DNow!, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, HyperThreading, AltiVec, and 64-bit instructions, among others. We seek this not because we want to perform faster calculations. Of course, this is an all too convenient addition. But, we would rather like to see them because they make the silicone cores of our processing units ever so hot, as they bring more transistors, and thus a larger area for electrons to rush around freely, adding to the overall increase in core activity. This, in turn, adds to the heat emission and ever-increasing entropy that both fascinate us so much it is even beyond our own comprehension, let alone comprehension of the remaining sentient life in the universe, as such. |
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