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Now days it is pretty much immaterial as projects are all pretty well set so that points crunched stay with the team an individual belonged to at the time the points were crunched. That eliminates the major bone of contention in the old days. Things have mellowed out a lot more so that a person can crunch to help other folks/teams to pay them back for help they rendered without a world war starting over it for the most part. In reality a lot of folks have crunched for multiple teams as they have developed crunching friendships over the years. And distributed computing doesn't have the extensive number of highly competitive teams that there used to be either. At the end of the day the end thing is to help the project. There's many good ones now and for the most part they are working away at goals that benefit humanity in one way or another.
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The man even has his own beer
But so do I http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...DirtyDicks.jpg
The XtremLab score is also his, and I got one (or two) aliases: 72CJ5 and AMD_72CJ5, all via our own wiki
As our wiki mentions a Tanpaku score for Brucifer, this is also one of his BOINC ids: http://boincstats.com/en/stats/-1/us...49/projectList
and this Brucifer-san has a Riesel sieve score: http://boincstats.com/en/stats/-1/us...47/projectList
72CJ5 gives another five id's: http://boincstats.com/en/stats/search/#72CJ5
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Interesting on the "Brucifer Pepper Porter" but it's just a limited batch thing. Dirty Dicks is a production run situation looks like. As for the Brucifer's, I'm not a fan of the hot peppers either. I do like the horseradish hot, wasabe paste mixed with a bit of soy sauce, or hot chinese mustard that clears out the sinus cavity in a heartbeat is much more to my liking. But generally I am a big fan of the dark Porter's, and also Belgian White's. :-)
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Here is a good interesting URL for you all to read and think about while you are digging up userid's.......
http://www.cnn.com/2013/03/16/opinio...tml?hpt=hp_bn7
George Orwell's world has been exceeded! Those that think they are escaping by using annonymous services out there in the cloud are only fooling yourselves, as the article points out, it only takes one little slip-up and the gig is up. :-) But then those of us that have been in the computer geek thing for years and years already knew that didn't we? Just maybe not how extensive it has all become. Quite sobering really.
edit:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2...-sabu-arrests/