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The Space.com article points that the grid aspect of the project will be akin to SETI@home's screen saver, which enables computers at home to search for signals of extraterrestrial life within volumes of astrophysical data. "The Evogrid is conceived to have volunteer computers become part of an interconnected grid for maximum processing capacity. Damer hopes to eventually get a million computers hooked into the grid." But rather than showing a visualization of the entire system to each user, data processing limitations would give each user a view of the piece that their computer is handling.
"These computers would receive data from the EvoGrid simulation engine. The simulation would essentially consist of a vast virtual ocean of interacting numbers that would model the time before complex life forms emerged. To know whether self-organization is occurring, the program would look for persistent patterns within the data."
Damer and team note that even if EvoGrid generates some virtual but convincing life forms, either through random or directed means, "the numbers will always be numbers." But Damer hopes that someday the creatures generated by the Evogrid could be re-created chemically, not an entirely outrageous idea considering the effort underway to recreate all the biochemical steps necessary to synthesize a kind of proto-life in the lab.
Peering into the future, Damer and proponents of the project believe that harnessing the power of evolution is the way to solve difficult problems such as creating habitable zones to colonize. And by combining digital simulation and ever-increasing computing power to pave the way from science-fiction to reality:
Looking even farther into the future, Damer thinks that far more advanced EvoGrids, paired with "ChemoGrids", could be used to create a new genesis of cyber-physical life forms to colonize asteroids, or to terraform Mars into a more habitable planet for humans. Freeman Dyson, who is now an advisor for the EvoGrid project, popularized this concept, and Damer notes that "evolution within an adaptively-tuned living system is the only mechanism powerful enough to make a place outside of the Earth habitable for us."Sources: Space.com, The EvoGrid Project
posted by Chris Jablonski
July 4, 2009 @ 4:54 pm
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