Projects: SETI@home
SETI@home Update
IBM's World Community Grid: A New SETI@home-Inspired Venture
by Amir Alexander
The original idea was brilliant in its simplicity: why not harness the unused
capacity of personal computers for some productive purpose? In a time when
scientists often struggled - and were sometimes unable - to find sufficient
computer time for their computationally intensive research, it seemed like
a logical idea. Untold amounts of computing power lay dormant in millions
of homes and offices around the world, ready to be used, if only one knew
how to reach them… But until five years ago, no one did.
Then came SETI@home. Launched in 1999, it quickly became a huge international
success. Within a few months, millions of personal computers that had been
launching flying toasters across dark screens in their spare time, were displaying
the famous dynamic power-bar graphics of SETI@home. Not only did SETI@home
users make possible the most sensitive search for extraterrestrial intelligence
ever conducted, they also demonstrated the power and potential of distributed
computing. SETI@home became – by far - the largest and most powerful
supercomputer ever assembled, accomplishing within months calculations that
would normally take years or even decades. Scientists in other fields were
quick to take note, and look for ways to make use of the enormous potential
of distributed computing in their own research.
The first to follow SETI@home’s lead were scientists working on specific
research programs, who set up distributed computing programs tailored specifically
for the project at hand. The most famous of these was folding@home, a Stanford
University-based project investigating patterns of protein folding, which
published its first scientific results in October of 2002. The problem with
such projects was that it was extremely difficult for research teams to set
them up. Setting up a distributed computing program is a challenge even for
professional computer scientists, and for scientists in other fields it is
a truly daunting task. Reaching enough users who will run the program on their
computers can be even harder. Most research programs that could potentially
benefit from the approach wouldn’t even attempt to use their limited
resources on such a venture.
To address this problem, a new generation of distributed computing programs
is now coming on-line. BOINC – the Berkeley Open Infrastructure for
Network Computing – provides a platform that any project can use. Scientists
in any field can now sign up for BOINC and with only minor modifications
immediately become part of an established and successful program of distributed
computing. Not only are they freed of the need to set up this complex system
themselves, they also gain access to the millions of users who are already
processing data for other BOINC projects. Users who participate in BOINC can
choose which projects they wish to run on their computers and how much processing
time they devote to each.
Launched earlier this year by the same team that created SETI@home, BOINC
has gotten off to a fast start. It already has five projects signed up, researching
topics ranging from climate prediction to gravity waves and protein folding.
Anchoring the BOINC family is the tried and true SETI@home, which is currently
moving from its “classic” format to the new BOINC platform, bringing
with it millions of devoted users.
BOINC now has company: Earlier this month IBM launched its own “World
Community Grid,” which like BOINC is intended to provide and easy-to-use
distributed computing platform for scientific projects. IBM’s “Grid” is
powered by software developed by United Devices for their own distributed
computing platform (www.grid.org), which focuses on research in the biological
and medical sciences. As of now the World Community Grid has only one project – the
Human Proteome Folding Project, conducted by the Institute for Systems Biology
to help predict the shape of human proteins. But with IBM’s power and
reach behind it, the Grid has the potential to expand quickly.
While both projects are intended to help researchers launch distributed
computing projects, BOINC and the World Community Grid differ in some important
ways. BOINC is an open source program, which means anyone can access its programming
code and adapt it to their specific needs. The Grid code, on the other hand,
is only accessible to IBM programmers and engineers. BOINC, furthermore,
is not centrally controlled, and there is no one deciding which projects
will or will not be included. In principle, any interested researcher can
launch his or her own BOINC project. The Grid, by contrast, is controlled
by IBM, which decides which projects to accept into its family and which
to reject.
While the two programs differ in their approach, they share a common goal:
to expand the reach of distributed computing, and make use of the untapped resources
of personal computers in scientific research. As SETI@home has demonstrated,
untold millions around the world are ready and eager to donate their computer
time for the advancement of knowledge and the benefit of humankind. The story
of distributed computing is only just beginning…
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