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#122 |
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May 2007
Kansas; USA
29×359 Posts |
It depends on where you start from. Total in the files is 3,918,344. So starting from n=360001, it would be 3,918,344-1,144,127=2,774,217. Starting from n=370001, it would be 3,918,344-1,258,856=2,659,488.
Here's another bit of information that someone was wondering about in another thread. How high would we have to search in order to overtake RPS? And I had to ask myself, is that even a reasonable goal? I did some searching on the top-5000 site for k<300 for n=333.3K-600K. I found 246 primes for 150 k-values. Of course this assumes no missed primes in non-double-checked ranges and not quite all of their k's have been searched to n=600K yet (but most have). So we have the following: 246 primes / 150 k's = 1.55 primes / k. (Assume 1.6 primes / k-value to allow for a small amount of additional searching that they still need to do.) 1.6 primes / k * 351 k-values = 562 primes in our k-ranges Two adjustments need to be made now for the # of primes for our ranges that are found by others that will not be reporting them as Primesearch, either past or present. Adjustment #1: 94 total primes previously found in our range - 57 primes previously found by Prime Search in our range when the project started Loss of 37 primes Adjustment #2: There are 12 k's that we are not fully searching. One of which we're not searching at all, one we're only searching for n>400K, and the rest were only searching for n>500K. Assume a loss of 1 prime each on those, i.e. 1.6 - 1 = 0.6 primes / k-value on those. Loss of 12 primes So at n=600K, assuming that none of our primes have dropped off the list, we would have: 562 - 37 - 12 = 513 primes. RPS currently has 558 primes. They had been averaging about 1 prime/day up until the last month when they dropped to about .75 prime/day. With the rate we're adding primes, all n=333333 primes should be gone in < 3 months. So if they continue for 90 days at their current rate, they'll add another ~67 primes for a total of 625 primes. The question is, how many primes will we have in 3 months? Is 3 top-5000 primes/day possible? That would make 270 more primes for a total of ~380 primes for Primesearch 3 months from now. We've added ~50 in 30 days so far but we've only recently had the full-power of Free-DC working for us. Regardless, when primes start dropping off, both projects will still be gaining ground. We'll just be gaining ground > 3X as fast. As ranges get higher primes/day will drop, so assume that we continue gaining ground on RPS at 3 (us) - 0.75 (them) - 1 adjustment = 1.25 primes / day gain on RPS. So if we're trailing 625-380 in 3 months, it would take us 240 / 1.25 = 192 days or ~6.5 months to catch them after the 3 month period is up at the end of May, i.e. mid-Dec 2008!! So in conclusion, it does not look like we can overtake RPS by n=600K like I had originally thought BUT if we can search beyond n=600K by the end of 2008, then we can catch them by the end of the year. I'm thinking we'd have to go to somewhere around n=750K-800K by the end of 2008. Is anyone up for that challenge? I am! ![]() BRING ON THE TOP-5000 RALLIES in the future!! lol We'll have ranges available to n=1M for 300<k<400 starting in March for selected k's that have already been searched to n=600K. Gary
Last fiddled with by gd_barnes on 2008-02-22 at 06:21 Reason: small math correction |
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#123 | |
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A Sunny Moo
Aug 2007
USA (GMT-5)
3·2,083 Posts |
Quote:
![]() As for n=600K-1M ranges for 300<k<400, those sound especially interesting, since primes at that level won't be dropping off the list for quite a while to come yet. Also, those high-n ranges will be especially well suited to LLRnet: LLRnet is great for high-n searches, because it deals with k/n pairs individually, and thus you can do them in exactly as small or large quantities as you want, rather than having to worry about whether you can finish a reasonably-sized block of high-n numbers in a reasonable amount of time (if, say, you've got an older machine, or your computer isn't on much). Thus, IMO we should have LLRnet focus on the higher-range numbers when they become available.
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#124 | |
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May 2007
Kansas; USA
242538 Posts |
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I agree in the long-run but in the short-term I REALLY want a rally to get 300<k<400 up well out of the danger zone near n=333333. With only 50 k's minus 4-5 reserved by others, we could blow away n=333K-380K or higher in a single rally. That'd be perfect. For individual files for the range, they'll be in either n=1K or 2K chunks. Same # of candidates as now would be had in a n=1200 piece. With 10% of k's removed though and the fact that even individuals are blowing through the files so fast, I may just post in n=2K chunks and if people want smaller, they can ask for it.Gad...so much to do with a range that has been SO far behind for years. Gary |
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#125 | |
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A Sunny Moo
Aug 2007
USA (GMT-5)
3×2,083 Posts |
Quote:
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#126 |
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A Sunny Moo
Aug 2007
USA (GMT-5)
186916 Posts |
The following have been completed by LLRnet:
350.4K-352.4K 354.0K-355.5K lresults for both have been emailed to Gary.
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#127 |
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Sep 2004
2·5·283 Posts |
Gary,
Please start preparing another 20k range for the LLRnet server port 300. Carlos |
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#128 |
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May 2007
Kansas; USA
29·359 Posts |
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#129 |
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Sep 2004
2×5×283 Posts |
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#130 |
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Account Deleted
"Tim Sorbera"
Aug 2006
San Antonio, TX USA
17×251 Posts |
Taking 353.4-353.6.
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#131 |
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Sep 2004
2·5·283 Posts |
taking 353.6-353.8
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#132 |
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Just call me Henry
"David"
Sep 2007
Cambridge (GMT/BST)
2×33×109 Posts |
llring 337.6-337.8 is over 3/4 done
i am up to: 645*2^337754-1 |
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