Ok. I've run the 3.03 client on both my
puters for a few days, and am seeing the 50%
(or so) hit that upgrading from the 3.0
has yeilded.
Here's what I think is going on:
In 3.0, they began using that Japanese fft
routine, and got a large performance increase
so they added Gaussian and Triplet calcs to
gain more information without losing in
performance. This is cool. They went to some
detail in explaining the plusses and features
of the new version.
The 3.0 actually crunched packets faster than
before, so they saw an increase in frequency
of UL/DLs at their site. Coupled with the
normal increase in number of users, they
began feeling the bandwidth pinch.
I think this 3.03 update is simply a return
to the old fft routine, to artificially slow
packet production. The new fft calculations
saved about 50% of the time taken to mow down
a packet, so replacing it with that old fft
calc would add back about 50%, which is about
what I've seen.
Is there any way to check this? If we are
"doing a lot more science", sobeit, I'm there
using the new version. But if I'm simply
going to be penalized in packet production
for installing it early, and there is in fact
no more or better info going back, then I'll
wait until the move is forced on everyone.
Anybody see any detail at all on what "more
science" is being done in the new version?
All I've really seen for detail is concerns
about their ISP and bandwidth...
A bit of a side note... for a few days a
week or so ago, everyone in my group suddenly
began processing packets *very* fast... over
an hour faster. I used to see those once in
a while, every 8 or 10 packets. Then they
dried up for a bit, according to my log, and
then, about the time 3.03 came out, a *lot*
of them came... more than 20 in a row.
I think that was so people would watch the
speed of the new binary, and see that it was
producing packets as fast as in 3.0.... by
offering a lot of the faster processing
packets at once about the time they thought
everyone would be installing the new ver.
This got wordy, sorry, but ... is this just
paranoia? Or could it be, in fact, exactly
what seti@home wants from us... a slower
march of packets/user?
FL
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