Profile: Gujjdo

Personal background
Hello!

I'm 17 years old and I live in a town called Västerås in Sweden, my hobbies is computers, programming, seti(of course), friends, cinema and those usually stuff...

Running SETI@home on 3 computers currently, not for the stats (as far as I know I don't earn anything on stats), I want to discover them and say hello to them before I die!
Thoughts about SETI and SETI@home
Extraterrestrial life definitly exists (I wouldn't sit here with SETI running if I wouldn't belive it)! The universe is way too big for just one civilisation. They will probably not be dangerous, well defensive maybe, but not aggressive, why would they be? There's nothing here they can't get on other surrounding planets, apart from life then... And if you think they would like us to be slaves, why would they? if they came here that many billions of miles away they probably know how to make a robot either way to do the work for them therefor they must be friendly.

We should definitly transmit a beacon for others to find, can't find any reasons why we shouldn't! Just think of all the possibilities we get if we get in contact with them, they probably know things that we don't know and so on, we should send a "hello" message which is easy to understand, and that should maybe be followed by our place in universe, where we are.

I run SETI@home cause i belive there is life out there, we aren't alone, and i couldn't efford with a rocket to get myself up in the universe to travel around so this is my (only) way to help discovering them :)

Stop reading this crap now and go back to work and try to find them instead! :)

//Simon
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.