A "crowdsourced" project in which home computer users were enlisted to help analyze radio signals from space is ending after ...
SETI@home has been one of the largest citizen science projects ever, with millions of users around the world.
The search for life in outer space hit a snag earlier this week when the SETI@Home project ran into some very terrestrial problems. A group of vandals apparently disrupted cables in the SETI@Home ...
For over two decades, millions of personal computers around the world have joined forces to scan radio signals from the ...
SETI@home had millions of volunteers from around the world helping in the search for extraterrestrial life. After reviewing almost 30 years of signals, University of California Berkeley researchers ...
For 21 years, private computers analyzed data from space for traces of extraterrestrials. The most promising signals are now ...
Here's what they found. The post Network of Home Computers Detected 100 Potential Alien Signals appeared first on Futurism.
ALIEN-HUNTERS have narrowed down their 21-year-search for extraterrestrial life to 100 “signals of interest”. The mammoth quest has seen scientists trawl through as many as 12 billion ...
After nearly four years of searching for extraterrestrial intelligence, the SETI@home project will now take a closer look at its most promising candidate radio sources. The “Stellar Countdown” will ...
This week astronomers from twelve countries on six continents will mark the fiftieth anniversary of the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) by beginning a coordinated series of ...
The year was 1999, and the Intel Pentium III was the most powerful CPU on the market, screaming along at 500MHz. The University of California Berkeley sought to tap into the power of idling PCs to ...