Posts by TheGoose

1) Message boards : News : Free Speech and SETI@home (Message 1864978)
Posted 1 May 2017 by Profile TheGoose
Post:
"May you live in interesting times..."

Is supposedly an old Chinese saying and indeed we are living in interesting times! But with all the benefits we receive from having a worldwide computernetwork, and SETI being one of them, one of the disadvantages is the trolling and bashing of hardworking people. Often anonymously. How fair and heroic!

Don`t get p.. off by these sad individuals and keep up the good work Eric!

Greetings from Holland!

Crunching away since june 1999. Nearly 18 years!
2) Message boards : SETI@home Science : Are we looking for the right signal? (Message 1024157)
Posted 10 Aug 2010 by Profile TheGoose
Post:
Some time ago I watched a Discovery documentary in which the big-bang theory was explained as being true because of the residu of radiation. The high-frequent lightflash of the big-bang slowly changed into infrared-light of lower frequentie that subsequently changed into radio interference. Because this kind of radiation was found proof was found for the big-bang theory.

This being the case.

Should we or are we looking for radiation with right frequency? If ET is transmitting audio or video signals, isn`t it true that they also detereorate or change over time/distance into signals with a lower frequency (kinda like the signals submarines use) and are we also Boincing these signals?
3) Questions and Answers : Windows : Seti Classic (Message 146770)
Posted 4 Aug 2005 by Profile TheGoose
Post:
I`m also an entousiastic SETI-classic user (3000+) but I don`t like the new BOINC stuff at all and called it quits. BOINC seemed to go messing with my computer and being a systems manager that posed to great a risk for me.

Sad though.

Success with the BOINC thing, but I think you`ve just killed SETI.





 
©2024 University of California
 
SETI@home and Astropulse are funded by grants from the National Science Foundation, NASA, and donations from SETI@home volunteers. AstroPulse is funded in part by the NSF through grant AST-0307956.