Citizen Science and Grid Computing 69
japonicus writes "The Economist has an article summarizing the current state of distributed computing (think SETI@home and its ilk), which suggests that distributed-human projects are going to be the next big thing. (We discussed one such project, the Galaxy Zoo, a few months back.) The distributed-computing platform BOINC is about to expand to human processing. Distributed proofreaders have been a longstanding success (yet inexplicably failed to get even a mention in the article); but there are a lot of other projects waiting in the wings."
games (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.espgame.org/ [espgame.org]
More info:
http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2006/09/more_on_google_image_labeler.html [oreilly.com]
Very interesting video:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8246463980976635143 [google.com]
My problem with grid computing (Score:3, Informative)
I know several slashdotters leave their computers on 24/7, but I don't. It's akin to leaving a light-bulb on overnight, or leaving the fridge door open. I do have a computer I leave on overnight when it's downloading, but it's a 5headless 00mhz p3 with 256mb ram and it's promptly shut down until I need to download again.
Every project you can participate in right now (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Micropayments for human labor to prevent boredo (Score:3, Informative)
Grid computing != Distributed computing (Score:5, Informative)
Re:DP (Score:2, Informative)
"All-volunteer" is not the same thing as "totally amateur." A number of our volunteers work in library science, proofreading, or other directly related fields.
It sound like you last visited DP a long time ago. DP has been standardized on PNG as their page image format almost since the site's inception 7 years ago, though we do allow jpg as an alternative. TIFF has never been an official format there. DP has also been producing HTML, DJVU, and LaTeX editions of projects (including illustrations) for many years. We are not tied to plain text, although we do produce it as a minimum for our target repository, Project Gutenberg.
Markup for bold and italics is the same as HTML, and markups exist for and are used to indicate marginal notes, footnotes, and the like. You are welcome to argue that a more complex markup is necessary, but considering the amount of outdated information in your comments here, you may wish to stop by and update your knowledge of the the state of the site. We'll happily welcome you back if you do.
D. Garcia
SysAdm - Distributed Proofreaders [pgdp.net].
Re:SETI... (Score:3, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed.net [wikipedia.org]
The RC5 contest, 10 years ago, was the first one to harness the concept and prove the validity. I know Slashdot loves using phrases like "the next big thing", but Grid computing has been around and been useful for a long time now.
Re:DP (Score:2, Informative)
As others have mentioned, you must have volunteered at DP a very long time ago because ALL of your objections to our work are no longer valid. The only complaint of yours that was valid when I started volunteering there 3.5 years ago was that DP's final versions submitted to Project Gutenberg were plain-text.
At the time you were volunteering, PG was primarily a repository of only plain-text documents. These days, in a large part due to the influence of volunteers at DP, nearly every new text submitted to PG has an HTML edition, some are submitted to PG in PG-TEI, which is Project Gutenberg's draft/proposed XML vocabulary based on the Text Encoding Initiative XML format, which can be transformed into many formats including plain text and HTML.