![]() ![]() If need be give them partial points for their time. The reason? They think it might upset people if they were halfway through a task and it was aborted. The only stupid thing about this is if I return the result after you've started the resend, it lets you finish it, wasting your electricity and computing time which could have been on another task. If you complete it before me, you get the points and I don't.īut in this case, mine will be returned the instant the server comes back into availability and there's no way a resend could get done first, so I lose no points. If I then hand it in late, but before you've started it, your computer will be instructed to abort. When I haven't sent a task in on time, the server will at some point give it to someone else, say you. I only hold a 1 day queue.ĭeadlines are irrelevant, that's not how Boinc works. I'm can't crunch because I'm out of work. If you really want to, I am sure, you will find guides online, but I won't provide instructions. This is a really bad idea, especially, as you are executing code on your machines, that is downloaded from the internet. What do I need to sign in blood to make this happen? I'm sick of this happening every couple of months to one project or another. I can understand that this is annoying, but this is something the project administrators need to get a grip on. Usually it is only one or two years (or even shorter). If your passport is stolen it can only be used by a bad actor until it expires.Ī 10 year validity is really unusual by the way. Your driving license example might not be fitting in this case. If the certificate expires/is not renewed you can no longer be sure, that the website was not taken over by someone else. The certificate gets issued by a trusted third party for a given time frame. It is not the website becoming dangerous once the certificate expires. ![]() How can it be safe now, then not safe one second later? What's magical about these certificates? How can they prove a site is safe for the whole sometimes 10 years the certificate is issued for? It's like me getting a driving license which expires in 50 years, then saying I must therefore be a safe driver in 50 years, but in 51 years, I'm dangerous. ::edit:: so i'm no longer ninja'ing this thread, because both cpus in my laptop and desktop are running no more than 25%.will post a screen shot momentarily.that's the screenshot of my laptop, so before anyone asks i do have it plugged in so the fact that i have the compute on battery option unchecked is not applicable, i don't think.unfortunately my desktop is at home so no screenshots of it, but it's basically the same thing.i've got quads in both desktop and laptop, and i'm only running one GPU task and one CPU task, the other 7 threads are basically treated as if they're non-existent.I feel like i've got all the right options enabled, but maybe i'm missing something.I'd like an explanation of how a website can become dangerous in literally one second. is it more effiicient at completing tasks if you have it switch every 180 min vs every 60? Hey, sorry to hijack.but you raised a question for me.you have the "Switch between applications every." 180 minutes.i thought BOINC recommended every 60, so i have mine at 60.
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