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WANTED: PC Users' downtime to study Global Climate

Met Office | 15.09.2003 04:36 | Analysis | Ecology | Technology

"Those taking part will be contributing to the biggest climate science project ever. We already have more than a thousand people world-wide who have signed up. The more participants we get, the more successful the experiment will be."



New climate prediction experiment

12 September 2003

The Met Office's world renowned climate prediction model will soon be used by internet surfers around the world as part of new international climate experiment, climateprediction.net. Launched today (Sept 12) at the London Science Museum and the BA Festival of Science in Salford, is an innovative project which aims to allow computer users anywhere in the world to participate in climate prediction work.

Climateprediction.net is a collaboration between the Met Office, the Universities of Oxford and Reading, the Open University, the CCLRC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory and Tessella Support Services plc. It works by allowing each user to download their own unique copy of a specially tailored version of the Met Office's global climate model and run it on their own PC. The user can see the signal of climate change unfolding in their model and, when the experiment is completed, the information will be fed back to the team for analysis.

Mat Collins, Met Office climate scientist, has been working on the project for almost four years: "This experiment will give us the most comprehensive assessment of future climate change. At the Met Office's Hadley Centre we can only perform a small number of projections of climate change at any one time. climateprediction.net will allow us to run many more of these experiments and give better estimates of uncertainties in climate change to policy makers.

"Those taking part will be contributing to the biggest climate science project ever. We already have more than a thousand people world-wide who have signed up. The more participants we get, the more successful the experiment will be."

Climateprediction.net was the brainchild of Dr Myles Allen at the University of Oxford. He said: "Thanks to chaos theory we can't predict which versions of the model will be any good without running these simulations and there are far too many for us to run them ourselves. Together, participants results will give us an overall picture of how much human influence has contributed to recent climate change and of the range of changes in the future."

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Join the climateprediction.net experiment!

What is climateprediction.net?
The climateprediction.net experiment has been developed to allow a state-of-the-art climate prediction model to be run on home/ school/ work computers. By getting data from thousands of climate models, we will generate the world's largest climate prediction experiment.

Why?
Climate change, and our response to it, are issues of global importance, affecting food production, water resources, ecosystems, energy demand, insurance costs and much else. There is a broad scientific consensus that the Earth is likely to warm over the coming century, but estimates of how much vary hugely. By taking part in the climateprediction.net experiment you can help to improve scientific forecasts of 21st century climate.

What do we want you to do?
We want you to run a climate model as a background process on your computer (similar to the successful SETI@home project). It should not affect any other tasks you use your computer for. If you choose to download the model, you will be supplied with your own, unique, version of the model. As the model runs, you can watch the weather patterns over the globe evolve. The results are sent back via the internet, and we are developing an interactive portal to allow you to compare your results with other people's as the experiment progresses. The Open University will be offering a short course based on the project, and there will also be opportunities to get schools involved with the project.

to download -  http://www.climateprediction.net/download/index.php

Met Office
- Homepage: http:// www.climateprediction.net/index.php

Comments

Hide the following 5 comments

Do you trust them?

15.09.2003 07:27

They don't trust you enough to let you have the source code so that you can see what your computer is doing (unless they consider you a "bone fide" researcher). Do you trust them enough to be running their unknown code on your computer? I don't. I just can't believe that they are really claiming that this is to protect the integrity of their experiment: surely everyone knows security through obscurity isn't really security?

MJR


Tried it before

15.09.2003 10:05

with "folding at home" a program which takes over your computer if you are away from it and starts folding some proteins to combat cancer. This program has been going for some months. Unfortunately when I tried it some months ago, it was "taking over" my computer- gradually more and more porteins were folding and taking over bandwidth and stuff e.g. when I was downloading other huge stuff and the computer was at rest. At one time it folded over 40 different proteins and I couldn't get it to stop and quit my computer when I wanted to work with it.

Also when it was runnning on windows it just contributed to multiple more crashes and "hanging" because this windows system was just too unstable to run it.

In the end I had to remove it because it was too annoying.
Hopefully this climate change version is a better one, which is less invasive and intrusive.


Apparantly §folding at home" runs much better under linux though.
But I still would like to try out the climate change version, to see if this one works better.

ab


its okay

15.09.2003 15:57

It works fine on xp1700 with xp pro. Runs as low priority task. Occasionally makes typing stop and start but rarely.

zaskar


Do you trust ANY software

15.09.2003 16:09

I can't see why MJR is so sceptical of this when the source code for 99% of software out there is also totally secret allowing it to do who knows what. This climate change software seems to be small beer compared with the vile phoning home etc antics of blatant spyware like Comet cursor, Real player, Hotbar, Gator etc that computer users including political activists the world over positively encourage to infest their PCs. Even Red Hat Linux is quite fond of making certain reports back to base. If you don't like all this you'd be better off writing your own op sys & apps or use an abacus. See you some time in the next century.

soft head


What About Debian?

16.09.2003 14:36

In response to soft head, the source code for everything in Debian (  http://www.debian.org/ ) is available under GPL or similar licences, so there's already an OS which lets you see /all/ the source code for everything you run. It's very good and stable, though somewhat technical for some people's tastes.

I'm not quite sure about redhat "reporting back to base", as I'm not a redhat user, but I'd imagine you could probably switch that off (kill -9 ).

ciderpunx


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