I am catching up after returning from travel.
I updated
the calendar in #17 and will continue to do so, but certainly often with random delay because of other stuff happening IRL.
I am lending my computers to
parsnip soup, like I did in recent PrimeGrid challenges. Therefore my contribution to Pentathlon will be a few late validations at MilkyWay at best.
Apropos MilkyWay and late validation: Like many other projects, MilkyWay's validator needs 2 matching results per workunit before it gives credit. But unlike any other of such projects that I know of, MilkyWay does not generate 2 tasks per workunit at once and sends out both ASAP. Instead, it sends 1 task, waits for its result to return (success or error),
then sends a next task, and so on until there are two matching returns. That is, a workunit is worked on serially, not in parallel, which obviously increases the time until credit is given for the first good result of a workunit.
Reading this thread, it is obvious that the recent cancellations of SETI.Germany's WCG Birthday Challenge (used to happen on November 16–23 every year) caused some WCG bunkering knowledge to get forgotten. I forgot some specifics of that myself, but at least I know that I put some notes somewhere and simply would have to dig those up if I needed them. There were some of us who built multi-day bunkers in WCG Birthday Challenges, and there were others who decided not to yet knew what it took to do so. (With other WCG subprojects, 10 days deep bunkers were doable, which let you put 17 days computer time into the 7 days long contest. Additionally, I for one maintained several of such bunkers in a staggered fashion, such that I had peak output on the
last day, not on the
first day.)
I don't want to make a point that many days deep bunkers should be done again. After all, Krembil's servers << IBM's servers. And we had more time to prepare for WCG Birthday Challenges than we have for Pentathlon's subcontests. All I want to say is that my first impulse, when I was reading up on this thread, was surprise how project details can get forgotten although they seemed to be well known once.