mersenneforum.org  

Go Back   mersenneforum.org > Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search > PrimeNet

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 2013-01-10, 23:00   #1
dbaugh
 
dbaugh's Avatar
 
Aug 2005

1668 Posts
Default long history

There are some exponents that have a lot of history. 864917 has 346 History lines. I understand 1277 at 439 and 1619 at 270. Others do not make as much sense to me. I think they may result from submission error loops in some cases. Other than stumbling upon them, is there a way to find these long history exponents? I would love to collapse some with a factor. What are your best examples?
dbaugh is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2013-01-11, 02:08   #2
Batalov
 
Batalov's Avatar
 
"Serge"
Mar 2008
Phi(4,2^7658614+1)/2

224318 Posts
Default

Somewhere in the world, there may be an Uni or maybe a school district where a former sys admin (who may be long gone) impregnated the OS image disk with a copy of self-starting Prime95 complete with a worktodo with this exponent. Now every time they reimage the computer (or computers... and even then, probably because the poor computers seem to run unexplicably slow!), the exponent is run all over again. (google "Brad Niesluchowski seti")

Just a wild theory.
Batalov is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2013-01-11, 02:56   #3
petrw1
1976 Toyota Corona years forever!
 
petrw1's Avatar
 
"Wayne"
Nov 2006
Saskatchewan, Canada

3·5·313 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by dbaugh View Post
There are some exponents that have a lot of history. 864917 has 346 History lines. I understand 1277 at 439 and 1619 at 270. Others do not make as much sense to me. I think they may result from submission error loops in some cases. Other than stumbling upon them, is there a way to find these long history exponents? I would love to collapse some with a factor. What are your best examples?
Well there's 1,000,003 that was LL'd many times before it was subsequently P-1's about 100 times.

I believe there was another just a little higher in the low 1M range that was LL's a hundred or more times.
petrw1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2013-01-11, 02:58   #4
kracker
 
kracker's Avatar
 
"Mr. Meeseeks"
Jan 2012
California, USA

23·271 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Batalov View Post
...

self-starting Prime95 complete with a worktodo with this exponent. Now every time they reimage the computer (or computers... and even then, probably because the poor computers seem to run unexplicably slow!), the exponent is run all over again. (google "Brad Niesluchowski seti")

Just a wild theory.
Computer-Atelophobia?

Last fiddled with by kracker on 2013-01-11 at 02:59
kracker is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2013-01-11, 23:37   #5
TObject
 
TObject's Avatar
 
Feb 2012

34·5 Posts
Default

Doing a quick double-check on a low exponent, is a fast way to verify the setup is working. I have done it a couple of times when setting up new computers before letting them loose.
TObject is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2013-01-12, 20:50   #6
lycorn
 
lycorn's Avatar
 
"GIMFS"
Sep 2002
Oeiras, Portugal

5C216 Posts
Default

You may as well test a known prime.
It also tests the system, with the plus of making you feel an important person when the result pops out ...
lycorn is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
History ET_ Operazione Doppi Mersennes 15 2012-09-19 13:11
Using long long's in Mingw with 32-bit Windows XP grandpascorpion Programming 7 2009-10-04 12:13
I think it's gonna be a long, long time panic Hardware 9 2009-09-11 05:11
History Greenbank Octoproth Search 1 2007-02-16 23:41
History of 3*2^n-1 Citrix 3*2^n-1 Search 2 2006-11-16 00:13

All times are UTC. The time now is 22:27.


Fri Aug 6 22:27:34 UTC 2021 up 14 days, 16:56, 1 user, load averages: 3.17, 3.27, 3.20

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

This forum has received and complied with 0 (zero) government requests for information.

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.
A copy of the license is included in the FAQ.