T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
943.1 | famous | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Anything! Just play it loud! | Wed Oct 12 1988 05:02 | 46 |
| Just got this press release...
excuse typos...
COMPUTER FACTORS 100 DIGIT NUMBER FOR FIRST TIME.
CHICAGO, OCT 11 Reuter.. Researchers in the United States, Europe
and Australia have combined their computer power to factor a
100-digit number for the first time, the University of Chicago
announced today.
The number factored -- that is, broken down into the numbers which
when multiplied produce the figure was 11 to the 104th power plus
one.
It has been known for years that the number was divisible by 2,17,
and 6,304,673, the University said.
The computer Factoring identifed two remaining factors, one with
41 digits and one with 60 digits.
Arien Lenstra of the Chicago faculty designed a program which
produced the result by employing hundreds of computers in the
United States, Europe and Australia working during hours when the
computers would normally be idle.
THe results, which took 26 days to generate were sent out by
electronic mail and compiled at the Systems research Centre of the
Digital Equipment Corporation in Palo Alto, California.
The 100 digit number is the the largest ever factored, the
announcement said.
IT was accomplished years earlier than expected. By contrast a
Single Cray SuperComputer would have taken nearly a year to come
up with the answer, the university said.
Lenstra said researchers were now trying to factor a number with
102 digits. He said that the use of combined computer power to
factor numbers had implications for the security of cryptographic
systems used in commerce, industry and by Government.
He said the ability to factor is the way to breach the security of
key public cryptosystems, which are widely used to protect the
integrity of wire transfers of funds...
|
943.2 | I read about it -- it must be true! | POOL::HALLYB | The smart money was on Goliath | Wed Oct 12 1988 13:47 | 4 |
| > The 100 digit number is the the largest ever factored, the
> announcement said.
Not exactly. .0 said it more correctly.
|
943.3 | Bravo! | SDOGUS::DRAKE | Dave (Diskcrash) Drake 619-268-2660 | Sun Oct 16 1988 18:23 | 4 |
| This quite an achievement, it made the front page of the Los Angeles
Times. It is also a strong testament to network resource management.
Can we find out more about how the mission was accomplished?
Algorithms? Software environment? TNX - Dave Drake
|
943.4 | It the method published | DIODE::CROWELL | Jon Crowell | Wed Nov 02 1988 11:30 | 9 |
|
It seems to me this is the kind of thing that the government will
send guys in trenchcoats to visit. Have they classified your algorythm?
Can it be publised or has it been publised?
I remember hearing for years that the NSA had methods to factor
huge numbers fast but it was all classified.
Jon
|
943.5 | | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Wed Nov 02 1988 21:03 | 5 |
| This has all been fairly public. If you want to donate some
spare CPU cycles to them, just get in touch and they'll even
send the code to be run.
Dan
|
943.6 | | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Tue Nov 22 1988 19:00 | 3 |
| Related notes are in 30.6-30.9 and perhaps in 259.0.
Dan
|
943.7 | On-line reference for factoring info | CIRCUS::MSM | | Tue Nov 29 1988 15:49 | 6 |
| The first draft of a paper about the factorization techniques
we used is now available in a note in the conference
CIRCUS::SRCNOTES. I'll be posting the final version there, as
well as periodic reports of our progress.
Mark
|
943.8 | it's in 28.0 | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Tue Nov 29 1988 18:49 | 10 |
| It was in note 28.0, "Factoring by electronic mail" by
CIRCUS::BROWN. Press Select or KP7 to add the conference to
your notebook, or use
Notes> ADD ENTRY CIRCUS::SRCNOTES
When the full paper is ready, it will appear as a reply to
the same topic.
Dan
|
943.9 | Factoring big numbers using PC's | SHALOT::FRAZER | shattering the isinglass | Thu Jul 27 1989 13:17 | 28 |
| Hmmm nobody seems to have noticed ...
From a press release last fall:
Carl Pomerance and W.R. "Red" Alford of the University of Georgia
have succeeded in factoring some pretty hefty numbers with PC's.
Quoting the press release:
All of the factoring was done on PC clones (three or four AT
clones were also used) except for the matrix reduction. The
matrix reduction step was done on a Sun 3 workstation
using a new matrix reduction algorithm of J.W. Smith
and Carl Pomerance.
Result:
2^332+1 =
17*
11953*
14767689550320172808742174828062347720350769*
2915547797343721112173446482628529057775979692132113
The C95 factored was theproduct of the last two numbers.
Red & Carl
John F.
|
943.10 | Another Factoring from Carl and Red | SHALOT::FRAZER | shattering the isinglass | Thu Jul 27 1989 13:26 | 33 |
| Also from the doors of Carl Pomerance and 'Red' Alford:
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
We have a FACTORING!!!
2783415704056554985941269027566547436008362462334209
6856531741041792239054980342217258517995521
----------
Graphitti on the paper:
After 'We have a FACTORING' someone wrote: (of what?)
To which someone else wrote: Multiply the two numbers, dummy.
To which someone has responded: C95 of 7^128+1
This is a couple of months old.
John F.
|
943.11 | More on PC factoring | SHALOT::FRAZER | shattering the isinglass | Thu Jul 27 1989 13:36 | 19 |
| I got the marvelous opportunity to talk to both Carl Pomerance
and 'Red' Alford the week at Georgia. They are polishing up the
PC algorithm and are getting ready for another factoring. Look
for a 100+ digit PC factoring in the near future.
Red is doing the PC programming and was explaining that in order
to get the factor base, some 50,000 or so known primes onto the
PC he had to remove a lot of the operating system from memory,
and from the disk. and actually has code where the software
interrupt vector table ought to be. The data for the latest
factoring was stored on a shoebox-full of about 200 floppies. (2
meg I think he said).
BTW, the first PC factoring of a C95 number is also published in
'Science' December 23, 1988 pp 1634-1635 Vol 242.
Cheers,
John F.
|
943.12 | | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Sun Sep 10 1989 17:47 | 19 |
| >> .7 The first draft of a paper about the factorization techniques
>> we used is now available in a note in the conference
>> CIRCUS::SRCNOTES. I'll be posting the final version there, as
>> well as periodic reports of our progress.
>> .8 It was in note 28.0, "Factoring by electronic mail" by
>> CIRCUS::BROWN. Press Select or KP7 to add the conference to
>> your notebook, or use
>>
>> Notes> ADD ENTRY CIRCUS::SRCNOTES
>>
>> When the full paper is ready, it will appear as a reply to
>> the same topic.
The reply is there, 28.1, 1469 lines, by Mark S. Manasse
and Arjen K. Lenstra. You can extract it from there or
copy circus::SRC$notes:t28_1.ps.
Dan
|