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LetNet Showcase: LetNet's Distributed Computing
Team
Reports:
Download Version 23.6.1 Clients:
(New: In the version
20 clients you can optimize your memory settings: see the included readme.txt
file for details!)
Important users for WinNT/2K/XP Users about Running as Service:
This version of Prime.Net has removed the use of the NTPrime.exe service. Please do not use it. Delete or Disable that service and follow the instructions below:
1) Download and install firedaemon from ftp://ftp.letu.edu/internet/distributedcomputing/prime.net/firedaemon-fd009c-fdui10R3.exe.
2) Start firedaemon's UI.
3) Give the service a name, we suggest prime.net.
4) Change the startup type from Manual to Automatic.
5) Select "Interact with desktop".
6) Optionally select "Start immediately" if prime95 is not already running.
7) Check the "Auto restart" option if you want the program to restart in case
a user accidentally exits prime95.
8) Enter the application working directory, probably C:\Program Files\Prime95.
9) Enter the executable name, likely C:\Program Files\Prime95\prime95.exe.
10) Set the priority to Idle.
11) Choose the CPU0 option.
11b)To install prime95 as a service on the second CPU of a dual processor follow
the instructions above but use a different service name, enter -A1 in
"Application options", and choose CPU1.
12) Once Prime.Net has launched, select the Menu Item "Options/Tray Menu" to have Prime.Net minimize to the system tray once you minimize it on startup.
Upgrading Existing Clients:
If you have an existing copy of Prime.Net running on your system
and wish to upgrade, it is important that you do not delete any existing config
or prime files in your directory. You should stop the program or service,
then unzip the new version on top of the old version (which will replace only
certain files, not the configs or prime files) and then restart the program or
service. It is recommended that NT/2000 service users remove the service,
reboot, and reinstall the service.
News:
We've received a letter from Scott
Kurowski, the creator of Prime.Net and Founder of Entropia, Inc
congratulating us on our move into the Top 100 producers for the Prime.Net
effort. Click here to read it!
About Team Prime.Net:
LetNet provides several
opportunities to contribute excess computing power on personal computers to
mathematical or scientific research projects, being coordinated through the
Internet.
Our primary project participation
recently has been with the Prime.Net project which is looking for rare primes
which can be represented in the form (2^p-1). These primes are known as
Mersenne primes. The last four Mersenne Primes discovered (#35, 36, 37 and
38 were
discovered not by supercomputers or mathematical think-tanks - but by the
Prime.Net effort - each time eventually by one low-end personal computer!
Download a Prime.Net client here and set it up to join LetNet's team (described
below)!
Instructions for
Installation:
When you have downloaded your
client configuration is very simple - the instructions below are for Windows
95/98 but users of NT/2000 or alternative operating systems should be able to
find the same options in their clients:
If you have any questions
about setting up Prime.Net and joining the LetNet team, don't hesitate to ask
us. Send e-mail to
techsupport@letu.edu
with any questions you have!
- Here is a statement from
Prime.Net about how successful this project has gotten:
As of 4 September 1999 PrimeNet's sustained throughput* is 0.85
Teraflop, or 850 billion floating point operations per
second, 71 CPU years (Pentium 90Mhz) computing time per day. For
the testing of Mersenne numbers, this is equivalent to 30 Cray T90
supercomputers, or 15 of Cray's most
powerful T932 supercomputers, running continuously at peak
power. As such, PrimeNet ranks among the most powerful computing systems in
the world.
This amazing and fun computing effort is being applied by people from around
the entire planet, producing research results that promote theoretical
studies in mathematical number theory, cryptography and parallel computing.
It also fosters a growing international spirit of Internet cooperation for
research.
Anyone with an Internet-connected Windows, Linux, Mac or OS/2 PC or server,
or FreeBSD UNIX box can participate using our free, easy to use research
software. The software has been carefully crafted to use only unused,
spare CPU time.
There are also several other good distributed computing
projects on the web, the most famous of which is the distributed.net
project. While we are eager to have you help us look for primes,
distributed.net also offers several interesting distributed computing projects
which we participate in at some level. You can read more about
distributed.net's projects at their web page at http://www.distributed.net.
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