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Distributed.net Finds Optimal 25-Mark Golomb Ruler

Posted by timothy on Sat Oct 25, 2008 08:32 PM
from the unique-and-in-duplicate dept.
kpearson writes "Distributed.net's 8-year-old OGR-25 distributed computing project has just proven conclusively that the predicted shortest 25-mark Golomb ruler is optimal. 'The total length of the ruler is 480, with marks at positions: 0 12 29 39 72 91 146 157 160 161 166 191 207 214 258 290 316 354 372 394 396 431 459 467 480. (This ruler may alternatively be expressed in terms of the distance between those positions, which is how dnetc displays them: 12-17-10-33-19-...).' 124,387 people participated in the project and two people found the shortest ruler, one on October 10, 2007 and the other on March 24, 2008."
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  • wtf (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 25 2008, @08:35PM (#25513693)
    i know we're all supposed to be nerds here, but this is way left of field. dont supposed you could have included a LITTLE more info in the summary as to what the fuck you're talking about?
    • Re:wtf (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:23PM (#25514021)

      According to the wikipedia article that was linked, a Golomb ruler is a set of numbers where no two pairs of numbers have the same distance. The "order" is how many numbers are in it, and the "optimal" ruler for an order is the one that ends on the lowest number.

      So what they've found which set of 25 numbers - where the distance between any possible pair among them is unique - ends on the lowest number.

    • The sumbitch spends most of his time in a dark cave.

      And what the hell would he measure anyway? Not like he has any windows for drapes, my precious.
      • Shouldn't have to (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ArchieBunker (132337) on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:23PM (#25514019) Homepage

        Headlines or summaries should be self explanatory.

        • Hello, context??? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by schamberlin (1354695) on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:34PM (#25514103)

          That's got to be the most incomprehensible story summary I've ever seen posted to Slashdot, and that's saying a lot. Seriously. The predicted shortest 25-mark Golomb ruler is optimal? What on earth are you talking about? How about giving us the barest minimum of a context, so we might have some tiny clue what that spew of buzzwords is getting at.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by Anonymous Coward
            You really can't get more specific than that. Just because you don't know what a Golomb ruler isn't doesn't make it a bad summary. A summary has to assume some understanding of the subject at hand. If a summary includes mention of a photon, for example, it doesn't necessarily require that it be defined what a photon is in the summary.
            • by Galactic Dominator (944134) on Saturday October 25 2008, @10:28PM (#25514475)

              A summary has to assume some understanding of the subject at hand. If a summary includes mention of a photon, for example, it doesn't necessarily require that it be defined what a photon is in the summary.

              That's the point of the criticism. A large majority of the readers here would be familiar with a photon, but not with a Golomb ruler.

                • by glwtta (532858) on Sunday October 26 2008, @02:03AM (#25515385) Homepage
                  Sure, but since there's a Wikipedia link right in the summary that does a wonderful job explaining it, this is just a simple case of RTFA.

                  So, to understand the summary, and therefore decide whether or not I want to RTFA, I need to RTFA? You see where that defeats the purpose of the summary?
                  • by Toonol (1057698) on Sunday October 26 2008, @02:48AM (#25515603)
                    This is Slashdot, we're supposed to be intelligent here. This means that while we may not know what a Golomb ruler is, we should be eager to find out, and competent enough to take the simple step necessary to do so... not complain that we aren't being spoonfed gently enough (even though posting that complaint takes more effort than the required click to actually find out).
                    • by glwtta (532858) on Sunday October 26 2008, @03:18AM (#25515705) Homepage
                      we should be eager to find out, and competent enough to take the simple step necessary to do so

                      Oh get off it. It's not about being "spoonfed", it's about writing a decent summary. When mentioning a relatively obscure topic (yes, yes, all real geeks know what a Golomb ruler is, etc) it's pretty much common sense to throw in a one-sentence description (so we at least know the general context), instead of, say, a useless list of numbers. I don't need you to tell me what I'm supposed to be eager to do, thank you very much.

                      As far as complaining goes, given that:
                      - that was a bad summary
                      - it is the job of an editor to improve on bad summaries
                      - Slashdot does have editors

                      It is at least theoretically possible that complaining can accomplish something. Theoretically.
          • by this great guy (922511) on Saturday October 25 2008, @11:06PM (#25514651)
            The words "Golomb ruler" are displayed in a dark green color by your browser. Placing the mouse pointer over them usually transforms it in a hand. This is called an "hyperlink", or more commonly, "link". By clicking on it, you are redirected to a page from a site called "Wikipedia", a free, multilingual online encyclopedia project. This page explains what a Golomb ruler is. HTH.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:06PM (#25513891)

    distributed.net used to have a very vibrant community, with several projects on-going at one time. But lately, things haven't been going so well for them. The prize funds for their RC5-72 challenge were recently yanked. And the only other project they had on-going was this OGR-25 project.

    Does anyone know if they'll offer further projects in the near future? Many people I know have moved on to BOINC-based [berkeley.edu] distributed computing projects, instead of sticking with distributed.net.

    • RC5-72 (Score:5, Insightful)

      by epine (68316) on Sunday October 26 2008, @01:01AM (#25515187)

      It's worth calculating the number of gigawatt-hours of electricity is expended on these toy problems. The original goal was to make a political point: we can't assume some of these codes are out of range with present technology. Having made your point, you're just boiling water to arbitrarily make the problem another order of magnitude more expensive to crack.

      When did we decide that the major problem facing planet earth was a surplus of electricity we must burn off by any available method?

      • Precisely! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by rbarreira (836272) on Sunday October 26 2008, @07:36AM (#25516757) Homepage

        Exactly... I participated in RC5-64, but RC5-72 just seems pointless to me. It's the exact same problem, just 256 times harder.

        Furthermore, these encryption challenges are not actually discovering anything. They're essentially brute-forcing a random number which another computer chose.

        Contrast this with distributed computing challenges about mathematics (such as OGR-25 which is being discussed here), health or other issues where the result is something meaningful and potentially useful about the world.

      • by rbarreira (836272) on Sunday October 26 2008, @08:03AM (#25516899) Homepage

        Let's assume the project will terminate when 50% of the keyspace has been searched. That's 2^71 keys to search.

        A E6600 Core 2 Duo PC calculates about 17M keys per second according to a quick google search. This means around 1.4e14 computer-seconds to search 50% of the keyspace, or 3.85e10 hours.

        A PC like this one uses around 150 watts, so it would consume 5,775,000,000 KWh of energy to search that keyspace.

        Some different ways of visualizing this amount of energy:

        • At $0.10 dollars per KWh, that's almost $600 million worth of electricity
        • It's the energy contained in 600 million liters of gasoline (157 million gallons)

        This of course doesn't take into account future improvements in CPU efficiency.

          • by rbarreira (836272) on Sunday October 26 2008, @11:31AM (#25518129) Homepage

            According to this page [pcstats.com], the same PC I mentioned before uses up 40 more watts when under full load than when idling. That's about 27% of the 150 watts I mentioned before.

            These figures are just ballpark numbers which give a rough idea. There are all kinds of people running these programs... Some make computer farms specifically to run them, some others don't buy new computers but leave theirs when they otherwise wouldn't, and then there's those who don't change their habits because of distributed computing. There's everything in between as well, making it very hard to estimate the real impact.

    • by steevc (54110) on Sunday October 26 2008, @04:24AM (#25515929) Homepage Journal

      I ran OGR25 again for the last few months in hope of seeing that project complete. RC5-72 just seems pointless to me. We already know it will take decades without some radical improvement in processing power.

      I've been disappointed by the lack of updates to the dnet site. Even now the projects page still says that OGR25 is active.

      I've moved to Folding@home now as I hope it will have tangible benefits. My contribution is pretty minor as I don't have the hardware for GPU processing.

  • The Wikipedia page says One practical use of Golomb rulers is in the design of phased array radio antennas such as radio telescopes. Antennas in an [0,1,4,6] Golomb ruler configuration can often be seen at cell sites [wikipedia.org]. Does this mean we can now construct larger antennas with greater sensing power, using fewer materials, due to knowing a larger optimal configuration than previously?
    • by Pinckney (1098477) on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:19PM (#25513987)
      Probably not. The [0,1,4,6] ruler is only order 4; we've previously known optimal rulers up to order 23. If larger configurations can be practically used, I would expect to see order 5 and higher already in use.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Does this mean we can now construct larger antennas with greater sensing power, using fewer materials, due to knowing a larger optimal configuration than previously?

      Probably not, since (a) optimal rulers of order greater than four but less than twenty have been known for some time, and (b) the [0,1,4,6] ruler is proven to be the largest perfect optimal ruler (according to the Wikipedia article).

        • by Jsprat23 (148634) on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:46PM (#25514173)

          As a hypothesis, if the distance from 0 to 1 is half a wavelength, the distance from 1 to 4 is 3/2 wavelengths and the distance from 1 to 6 is 5/2 wavelengths. These distances represent the first 3 resonances of a resonant dipole antenna. In the case of an antenna, perfect would mean capturing all of the resonances and thus be optimal.

      • by mabhatter654 (561290) on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:53PM (#25514231)

        it's essentially defines a list of numbers such that if you pick any two segments that are not the same segment they will always have different lengths. This is useful for things that involve harmonics.. radio, buildings, ect. where you need to build "imperfect" shapes. With antennas this is so that they don't interfere with each other in close proximity. With bridges you might need to make each length of bridge section a slightly different length to keep the bridge from vibrating to pieces. It's a list, highly useful to engineers of various types. Not that exciting, unless you really needed to have 25 critical measurements when 24 just wouldn't do.

  • by pottymouth (61296) on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:43PM (#25514153)

    My new yumiz ruler is perfectly calibrated in emh's and is 14.667 long. Now I'm going to go measure something like the how many pins can fit on one you guy's heads...

    • Re:proved? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by martin-boundary (547041) on Saturday October 25 2008, @08:55PM (#25513823)

      Did I fail math class?

      Yes. Yes, you did.

    • Re:proved? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gardyloo (512791) on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:01PM (#25513855)

      Mathematics may be defined
      as the subject in which we
      never know what we are talking
      about,nor whether what we are
      saying is true.
      --Bertrand Russell

    • Re:proved? (Score:5, Informative)

      by bunratty (545641) on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:03PM (#25513867)
      You're thinking of science. You can only disprove a hypothesis, never prove it true. In math, you can prove or disprove a conjecture.
    • Re:proved? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:13PM (#25513943)

      What most people don't realize is that all of mathematics is based on certain assumptions, alternatively called axioms, postulates or definitions. Do all triangles have interior angles that add up to 180 degrees? Yes, but only if you make certain assumptions. That's called Euclidean geometry. There is also non-Euclidean geometry which is equally valid and is used to describe some systems in reality. Is there no highest prime? Does 2 + 2 = 4? Do parallel lines never intersect? Are no circles square? Yes again on all counts, but only if you make certain assumptions. So when we say that "x is proven" in mathematics then that is really shorthand for "x is proven based on certain assumptions". That doesn't stop some overzealous mathematicians from acting a little bit smug. I would like to point all smug mathematicians to Kurt Godel's incompleteness theorems.

      • Re:proved? (Score:5, Funny)

        by Merls the Sneaky (1031058) on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:49PM (#25514197)

        You just reminded me of......

        Ah, Kryten; just thinking. [Rapidly] Assuming of course we're not dealing with five-dimensional objects in a basic Euclidean geometric universe and given the essential premise that all geo-mathematics is based on the hideously limiting notion that one plus one equals two, and not as Astemeyer correctly postulates that one and two are in fact the same thing observed from different precepts, (Pulls a "nerdy" grimace, and loudly exhales through his nose.) the theoretical shape described by Siddus must therefore be a poly-dri-doc-deca-wee-hedron-a-hexa-sexa-hedro-adicon-a-di-bi-dolly-he-deca-dodron. (Pulls the same face, exhales a second time.) Everything else is poppycock. Isn't that so?

        • Re:proved? (Score:4, Informative)

          by 7 digits (986730) on Sunday October 26 2008, @12:20AM (#25515015)

          > You are confused - there are no assumptions in mathematics because mathematics does not deal with any real entities. There are only definitions and what you are talking about applies to them: depending on your definitions properties of defined entities will differ. Quite a trivial conclusion most sane people already realize.

          *You* are confused and are mixing definitions and axioms. There are assumptions in mathematics, they are called axioms.

          http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axiom [wikipedia.org]

    • Re:Story (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Raenex (947668) on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:19PM (#25513995)

      why the hell is everything tagged "story"?

      I have another question. What happened to the option to turn off tags?

      And one more: Is there any forum to discuss Slashdot issues? Seems like the only way is to bitch off-topic in the articles.

      • Re:Story (Score:5, Funny)

        by Todd Fisher (680265) on Saturday October 25 2008, @10:46PM (#25514563) Homepage
        A forum!? You can take your fancy Web 2.0 "community" fad elsewhere. We've got Golomb rulers to discuss here!
      • Re:Story (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Zadaz (950521) on Saturday October 25 2008, @11:45PM (#25514829)

        Is there any forum to discuss Slashdot issues? Seems like the only way is to bitch off-topic in the articles.

        No, you can directly email them but of course they will only use that as ammunition to be taken out of context and savaged via the poorly conceived "Disagree Mail [slashdot.org]" "Feature".

        I'd leave, but there isn't really an alternative that's better. Instead I use adblock and suck off this teat without providing benefit to the site. (Unless you include this post as "providing benefit" which is dubious since it will almost certainly get modded down.)

    • Re:Story (Score:5, Informative)

      by _xeno_ (155264) on Saturday October 25 2008, @11:00PM (#25514629) Homepage Journal

      why the hell is everything tagged "story"?

      If you mouse over it (and have JavaScript enabled), you'll be informed that it's the "type tag." I assume the concept is that it differentiates between journals, comments, bookmarks, feed entries, and other types of nodes that could, conceptually, appear in the firehose [slashdot.org].

      I have no idea why Slashdot feels the need to show these on the main page, though, considering that everything that currently shows on the main page is a story. But if you play with the firehose, it's what tells you what "thing" the entry is.

      • Re:Story (Score:5, Funny)

        by glwtta (532858) on Sunday October 26 2008, @02:10AM (#25515415) Homepage
        If you mouse over it (and have JavaScript enabled), you'll be informed that it's the "type tag."

        Actually, when I mouse over tags I get an incomprehensible mess of overlapping elements. It's probably my fault for using something as obscure as Firefox, though; I'm sure it works perfectly on IE6.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Well, 25 choose 2 is 300 so presumably 180 numbers must be missing.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)


      #!/usr/bin/python
      marks = [0, 12, 29, 39, 72, 91, 146, 157, 160, 161, 166, 191, 207,
      214, 258, 290, 316, 354, 372, 394, 396, 431, 459, 467, 480]
      unmeasurable = set(range(1, 481))
      for i in range(1, len(marks)):
      for j in range(i):
      unmeasurable.discard(marks[i] - marks[j])
      print sorted(unmeasurable)

      Output:
      [81, 90, 93, 103, 110, 111, 120, 139, 153, 171, 172, 174, 176, 18

    • by gardyloo (512791) on Saturday October 25 2008, @09:54PM (#25514243)

      Yes, people routinely get this wrong. They're not wrong this time.

        In this case, the distinction between "it was proven" and "it was shown" is a distinction without a difference. In math, you can "show" something within a restricted domain; for example, that a postulated solution to a given equation really is a solution, without giving a complete family of solutions. One can show it numerically, or show it analytically. Here, a restricted set of postulated solutions over the only available domain (the positive integers) was exhaustively searched for actual solutions, and the set that satisfied the postulates was also shown to be optimal (in a well-defined sense for the problem).

          This is no more a "non-proof" than the proof of the 4-color map theorem in two dimensions, which was also "shown" using an exhaustive search.

    • Bah, Humbug! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Main Gauche (881147) on Saturday October 25 2008, @10:02PM (#25514303)

      There is a BIG difference between [proven and shown] as anyone within the Maths and the Sciences can tell you. I'm sorry, but people routinely get this wrong and it gets quite aggravating.

      First, there is such a thing as proof by inspection. It may be considered inelegant by certain folks, but it's there nonetheless.

      Second, it's just as aggravating (for those in certain fields) that computational results are not more valued. Sure, analytical results provide insight that computational results do not. But if you simply want to know the answer, why not accept a computational result?

      Third, anticipating the old "how do we know the computer didn't make a mistake" comment: Theoretical proofs need to be proofread just as code does. So why not accept a computer program (and its verified output, as in the summary) as proof?

    • by khchung (462899) on Saturday October 25 2008, @10:29PM (#25514483) Journal

      I am sorry, but listing out all possibilities (assuming that's what they did) and showing one is the minimum IS a valid proof for that minimum in that particular case.

      For example, to prove "7 is a prime number", listing out 1,2,3,4,5,6 and then showing all are not a factor of 7 is a valid proof that "7 is a prime number". If you think this is not a proof, tell me which step in the proof is wrong.

      Of course, whether the proof of Distributed.net is correct depends on how strongly they can prove their program actually covered all possibilities.

      • by excelblue (739986) on Saturday October 25 2008, @11:59PM (#25514897) Homepage

        Two minor mistakes.

        1.) 1 does indeed divide 7. So, you should only show that 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 does not divide 7.

        2.) You need to state that numbers larger than 7 do not divide 7.

      • by adavies42 (746183) on Sunday October 26 2008, @01:24AM (#25515251)

        I am sorry, but listing out all possibilities (assuming that's what they did) and showing one is the minimum IS a valid proof for that minimum in that particular case.

        For example, to prove "7 is a prime number", listing out 1,2,3,4,5,6 and then showing all are not a factor of 7 is a valid proof that "7 is a prime number". If you think this is not a proof, tell me which step in the proof is wrong.

        The one where you claim 1 is not a factor of 7....

    • by mabhatter654 (561290) on Saturday October 25 2008, @10:02PM (#25514305)

      the application has to do with harmonics. For example the classic problem is that bridge that collapsed under wind load in the 40's. It collapsed partly because harmonics from the wind, just like a whistle, built up. Part of breaking harmonics is having a quick list of numbers that you can be sure won't duplicate. In a bridge you might pick your structural members to be just a little "off" using proportions from this list so that no two pieces were identical, one way of reducing vibrations in the structure.

      Each length appears exactly once on the list and they can never be repeated unless you pick the exact same line segment.