Posted on 06/26/2011 5:24:28 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Then have to massage it...
All the info about your ass from Fakebook, Titter, Amazon, the grocery stores, pharmacies, petrol stations, Nevada bordellos, etc...
The data comes from the four machines on the LHC in which the collisions are monitored Alice, Atlas, CMS and LHCb which send back 320MB, 100MB, 220MB and 500MB of data per second, respectively, to the CERN computer centre.
Something doesn’t add up.
All I know is if they had some of the idiots I work with there they’d try and attach the entire thing to an email, then sit back and give you a stupid look when you b*tch about the download time.
I know a few like that.
My system wide irk that I encounter these days is with Windows 7 and certain older (obsolete but work) HP 1100 printers. Some sites with the good pipe and speed, it only takes a few minutes to get the driver. The driver is not standalone nor have I or anyone else has found one. HP’s only support is to use Windoze update to get it. I have had it take up to 90 mins at slow sites to get the driver.
That’s what happens when you run Windows 7.
I remember parties in the *1970s* where there was *at least* 1 PBR per second. Wait, what?
Sure you remember them.
They're catching up with Obama's Palin-bashing bloggers.
More RAP Music on this thread...Economic theory the topic:
Keynes versus Hayek: Big government versus individual rights
With that much info being generated all the worlds problems have been solved repeatedly, but relegated to the waste bin of history, while the operators sit around having flashbacks and playing spider solitaire.
/johnny
CERN experiments generating one petabyte of data every second
***************************EXCERPT*********************************
by Dan Worth at CERN
GENEVA: Experiments at CERN are generating an entire petabyte of data every second as particles fired around the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at velocities approaching the speed of light are smashed together.
However, Francois Briard, control infrastructure section leader, beam department, explained that CERN doesnt capture and save all of this data, instead using filters to save only the results of the collisions that are of interest to scientist at the facility.
We dont store all the data as that would be impractical. Instead, from the collisions we run, we only keep the few pieces that are of interest, the rare events that occur, which our filters spot and send on over the network, he said.
This still means CERN is storing 25PB of data every year the same as 1,000 years' worth of DVD quality video which can then be analysed and interrogated by scientists looking for clues to the structure and make-up of the universe.
Sending and storing the data requires a huge effort on the part of numerous firms beyond CERN, as Jean-Michel Jouanigot, IT computer systems group leader, explained.
To analyse this amount of data you need the equivalent of 100,000 of the worlds fastest PC processors. CERN provides around 20 per cent of this capability in our datacentres, but its not enough to handle this data, he said.
So, we have worked with the European Commission to develop the Grid, which provides access to storage and computing resources in the same way the web provides access to information, so we can store and access the data we create on this system."
There are 11 datacentre providers offering access to CERN on the Grid including companies in the US, Canada, Italy, France and the UK, and they in turn utilise storage from a further 130 locations, to ensure the wealth of data generated can be retained.
The data comes from the four machines on the LHC in which the collisions are monitored Alice, Atlas, CMS and LHCb which send back 320MB, 100MB, 220MB and 500MB of data per second, respectively, to the CERN computer centre.
Briard also revealed the organisation had recently managed to capture and monitor anti-matter for 15 minutes, a vast improvement on the mere billionths of seconds that it had previously managed, adding that this involves a unique method of analysis.
We can only trap anti-matter by ensuring it doesnt touch any matter, so we use magnets to suspend it in a vacuum, and we can only see what we had after its gone by measuring the radiation it leaves behind when it reacts with matter, he said.
wow... that’s fast!
what’s a factor of one thousand between friends?
picky picky
wait
make that a factor of one million...
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