Profile: tysen21

Personal background
Hmm. 15 years old; a very competent 15 year old mind you. I enjoy listening to electronic music. Such artists are: Aphex Twin, Autechre, Arovane, Boards of Canada, Chris Clark, Paul Van Dyke, Plaid, Richard Devine, Squarepusher, System 7, subatomicglue, and Whitehouse. Favorite quote: "Only a truely intelligent person can listen to music without words and fully understand what it means." :]

I don't know what else to put, I'll do more and add a picture later.
Thoughts about SETI and SETI@home
1. Extraterrestrial life most definetly exists. To think that of the billions and billions of stars in the universe, only ours is orbitted by a planet containing life is utterly absurd. We, however, will not discover any extraterrestrial life. They will find us, or there will never be contact between us. Maybe in a century or two when we have all of the kinks of space travel worked out we'll have a better chance of finding them. If we were to find alien life, many people would probably freak out, and many others would be overjoyed. It all depends on who you are.

2. We should definetly send a beacon for intelligent life to find. As I said in question 1, we aren't going to find them, they're going to find us. Sending a beacon will surely help, if just a little bit. Basically, we should say: "Hello, come to Earth, we can't come there." :]

3. I run SETI@home because it's very interesting. Anything that gives results without me actually doing any work is always fun. :] I think that this is a great idea, seeing as we are more powerful together than we are alone. You guys should get a message board up and make this even more a community. Or maybe you have one already, I'm not quite done snooping through the site.
Your feedback on this profile
Recommend this profile for User of the Day: I like this profile
Alert administrators to an offensive profile: I do not like this profile
Account data View
Team None



 
©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.