Network-Monitoring Data Put to Music 165
StrongGlad writes "Building on the idea that people are naturally attuned to sound, the Sheridan College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning has created software that translates network and server activity into music. And, their IT department operators can interpret the music to detect problems in the system." Talk about finding the beauty in Spam. From the article: "Last Friday, IT department operators began listening to what sounds like classical music but is actually a precise audio model of system metrics. They are trained to recognize instruments, chords, tempo and other musical elements of music as a translation of e-mail activity from 15 servers over three subnets. Every aspect of the music correlates to information. Probes detect server activity and send about 20 summaries a second to the iSIC sound engine. The data is aggregated and transformed into an audio format."
The Simpsons Already Did It (Score:2, Funny)
This idea is absolutely bunk! (Score:1, Interesting)
If you get a zebra to jump on a keyboard and play notes, how is that music?
Much training can cause interpretation of anything. There are people who can understand speech from a frelling frequency diagram. The nerve.
Been done before? (Score:3, Interesting)
Although it wasn't email / spam related, the system I'm thinking of used jungle sounds (birds, rivers etc.) but had things like lion roars when the firewall detected a hack attempt.
Am I just dreaming this, or can someone give me any more information?
Re:Been done before? (Score:1)
Re:Been done before? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Been done before? (Score:2)
Man the Slashdot collective is impressive. I've seriously been trying (on and off) for over a year to find that package. One comment and three minutes later.... and I'm shown that lions had nothing to do with it. Oh well, maybe v2
Thanks!
Re:Been done before? (Score:2)
Re:Been done before? (Score:1)
Re:Been done before? (Score:1)
Re:Been done before? Like 30 Years Ago (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Been done before? (Score:2)
I seem to remember though that version was applied to corporate metrics instead- it didn't sell well in England, where the music sounded like a funeral dirge, but it sold relatively well in America and even Japan, though the later got kind of high and squeeky at the end of the music.
Very cool. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Very cool. (Score:2)
You guys might be missing the point (Score:2, Interesting)
I think this is an excellent idea.
Re:You guys might be missing the point (Score:2)
Maybe we can finally answer the age old question.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Maybe we can finally answer the age old questio (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Maybe we can finally answer the age old questio (Score:2)
Re:Maybe we can finally answer the age old questio (Score:1)
Klingon Opera (Score:2)
Re:Maybe we can finally answer the age old questio (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Maybe we can finally answer the age old questio (Score:2)
Re:Maybe we can finally answer the age old questio (Score:2)
Re:Maybe we can finally answer the age old questio (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Maybe we can finally answer the age old questio (Score:1)
Re:Maybe we can finally answer the age old questio (Score:2)
A tidal wave?
Thanks guys! (Score:5, Funny)
Now there is an entire orchestra of uncomposed dissonance playing at all times that I'm responsible for listening to.
Grand.
Just Grand.
Re:Thanks guys! (Score:1)
Just thank god they're not using SMELLS (Score:2)
Ah the 'Net is full-o-beans today!
Re:Thanks guys! (Score:2)
If those actions could talk, they'd be fightin' words.
./ to music (Score:4, Funny)
Re:./ to music (Score:1)
Re:./ to music (Score:3, Funny)
Re:./ to music (Score:1)
OK, OK, it's fun... (Score:3, Insightful)
(I can imagine the dialog right now: wait, is the oboe a sign something is wrong, or is it the violin? Err...)
After a couple of weeks installing and configuring net-snmp, cacti and nagios, I seriously think music is NOT the way to go. Real-time graphics are a lot more informative and easier to understand. Music is fun, sure, but way too complex to understand.
Besides, I don't really like music entirely made by computers. And I am a Kraftwerk fan. Go figure.
An aid, not a replacement (Score:5, Insightful)
They don't want to replace all those graphic displays with music, but they intend to use sound in addition to graphics.
If you rely purely on a graphics display you would have to hire someone who has to babysit the monitor, in case something odd starts to happen. He can't really work if he has to stop every 5 minutes and check the monitor (and there are probably "false feeling of safty" effects to be countered too, after all, checking the monitor for X weeks and nothing big popping up might make the person(s) realax too much)
With the music you don't have to check at the monitor all the time, you notice when the music changes (and can go check) but as long as it remains the same you can get some real work done.
Re:OK, OK, it's fun... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:OK, OK, it's fun... (Score:2)
Besides, problems in controls often are that when something goes south there is too much information for yo
If the music corresponds (Score:2, Funny)
to specific patterns of network activity, then I would love to hear the Barry White-like sounds that the system would produce by monitoring all the pr0n coming through my Exchange server at work.......
wasn't this done in ~2000 = peep (Score:5, Informative)
Peep (The Network Auralizer): Monitoring Your Network With Sound
Michael Gilfix & Prof. Alva Couch - Tufts University
Abstract
"Activities in complex networks are often both too important to ignore and too tedious to watch. We created a network monitoring system, Peep, that replaces visual monitoring with a sonic `ecology' of natural sounds, where each kind of sound represents a specific kind of network event. This system combines network state information from multiple data sources, by mixing audio signals into a single audio stream in real time. Using Peep, one can easily detect common network problems such as high load, excessive traffic, and email spam, by comparing sounds being played with those of a normally functioning network. This allows the system administrator to concentrate on more important things while monitoring the network via peripheral hearing."
"This work was supported in part by a USENIX student software project grant. "....
Uh oh (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Uh oh (Score:5, Funny)
Sound of Silence (Score:2)
Re:Uh oh (Score:1)
Well my server seems to be playing Metallica...
Yes I'll hold.
Re:Uh oh (Score:2)
The idea itself definitely sounds familiar... (Score:1)
Re:The idea itself definitely sounds familiar... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, since it's generally agreed that the music studios stopped listening to their customers decades ago, all that would tell you what is wrong with a bunch of their executives. And we already know what is wrong with them.
Re:The idea itself definitely sounds familiar... (Score:2)
The music executives are very good at listening to their customers. They listen to their wallets. Americans, in my opi
Problem (Score:2)
That said, when a problem is found, does it start playing Hyden?
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(Suprise Symphony, if you don't get the joke.)
Re:Problem (Score:2)
Audio clips (Score:5, Informative)
Listen page [soundtomind.com]
Re:Audio clips (Score:2)
It sounds like the kind of "muzak" they play in DIY stores.
Pah, I'm going to back to Art Of Noise.
Re:Audio clips (Score:2)
Gordon Way - Douglas Adams (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Gordon Way - Douglas Adams (Score:1)
So now there are two. I guess the people nowadays just don't read classics anymore...
B.
Re:Gordon Way - Douglas Adams (Score:3, Informative)
"But the silliest feature of all was that if you wanted your company accounts represented as a piece of music, it could do that as well. Well, I thought it was silly. The corporate world went bananas over it."
Reg regarded him solemnly from over a piece of carrot poised delicately on his fork in front of him, but did not interrupt.
"You see, any aspect of a piece of music can be expressed as a sequence or pattern of numbers,"
Re:Gordon Way - Douglas Adams (Score:2)
Re:Gordon Way - Douglas Adams (Score:2)
Re:Gordon Way - Douglas Adams (Score:1)
network overhead?? (Score:1)
Something like this (Score:3, Interesting)
Been done before... (Score:4, Interesting)
So what does it mean... (Score:1)
what's that sound? (Score:1)
In all reality, I'd love to do a Brian Eno-ish sort of "found art" album with music like this. http://www.fruityloops.com/ [fruityloops.com] has a pretty cool function that turns pictures into ambient music, I'd love to hear server traffic in a similar manner.
Re: (Score:1)
Network Adagio (Score:2)
Bob, why is our network so slow?
I'm not sure Frank, but it may have something to do with the terrible cacophony of sounds eminating from the server room.
Tried this (Score:5, Funny)
the AC
silence vs multitasking (Score:4, Interesting)
Most "technical" work uses the left side of the brain, I suppose leaving the right side of the brain free to listen to music to monitor the system. But, every so often, even in what is considered "technical" work, a person needs to be creative, and it would be unfortunate if at that point in time your right side of the brain is off monitoring the system.
Of course, if multitasking is so important, audio content is really the only content which has the potential for effective multitasking.
Re:silence vs multitasking (Score:2)
Irrational Numbers (Score:1)
My basic idea is to run calculations of of these values in base2 and then see what it "looks" like or hear what it "sounds" like when the stream of bits is interpretted in different ways.
I like the idea of a never ending song or story that never repeats. I fully expect gibberish and static when interpreting the bitstream, but I'd still li
Re:Irrational Numbers (Score:1)
Re:Irrational Numbers (Score:2)
Port scan (Score:2, Funny)
Orcestral synthesis (Score:1)
Just make the network monitors output sheetmusic on little screens for all the musicians.
This will lead to a few seconds delay in the music, but nothing beats the real thing you know!
IT budget (Score:2)
Monitor network traffic by audio = Solaris ~1996 (Score:2)
No, it wasn't as complex as what this one does with chords and so forth, but the idea of using audio to listen to network traffic is nothing particularly new.
Now, if it could be customized so that specific s
Marlin Mason (Score:1)
And if the system if really good how will porno sound like... "ah ah uuuuuhhuhuuhuhu... ah ah ah uhhhhhhh"... or not? lol
However (Score:2, Funny)
A death metal remix of Mozart perhaps?
Yet another reason to not run Windows Servers folks - think of your poor ears!
Michael Gilfix already beat them to it (Score:1)
Peep, the network auralizer
Hey guys... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hey guys... (Score:2)
Wow... (Score:1)
Dude! If you play it backwards... (Score:1)
...while watching The Dark Crystal your head will explode!!
ChrisDirk Gently (Score:1)
Sounded (no pun intended) like a great idea at the time. I thought it was pretty original...
Used in medicine? (Score:2)
ballet dancers... (Score:1, Funny)
'music has got nothing to do with work, dude, and I work.' It's kind of like saying I have a bunch of ballet dancers, and I'm going to bring them into your workplace.
Almost everyone I know listens to music at work, so I'm not sure why he feels people don't "get it". The ballet dancers OTOH is an awsome idea. I could really use a dozen or so athletic women in skin tight clothing bouncing around in the server room. If something goes wrong, they can glissade their butts over and tell me about it.
I'
1997: NET SOUND wins Ars Electronica prize... (Score:2)
The home web page text:
The most significant aspect of the Internet
Is its being alive
Isn't it?
What would it sound like if we listened to it?
After creating the beta version in 1996, Net Sound members agreed they wanted to listen to a greater variety of Net sounds not only those of Ohno Research Lab. Anybody who wants to make sounds over the Net, please let us know--and increase our links via Net Sound "CENTRAL."
Note: Ars
Reminds me of Information Society + 56k (Score:1)
Also reminds me of the ole days of aohell 4.0 when i use to hum along with the modem connections.
Been doing this for years.. (Score:2, Interesting)
I also used to be able to recognise the connect speed of analogue modems by listening the negotiation, but that was many moons ago..
Noise (Score:2)
Realistically, with all of the talk of people listening to music all day damaging their hearing, wouldn't silence be golden? Maybe some sort of light beacon flashing red could do the exact same thing, or a projector with a few graphs on the wall?
-M
After listening for a while... (Score:1)
Been there, done that... (Score:1)
But the RIAA is their only customer (Score:2)
Won't be long before these guys... (Score:2)
ping (Score:2)
Anyway, I forgot I had it, and one day SSHd into my machine at work to test connectivity to somewhere. 15 minutes later I get a call: "Turn that fucking beeping off!".
Oh Great (Score:2)
Now the RIAA can sue the networks themselves if they inadvertently play copywritten melodies.
"Arrest those packets - they played 'Imagine'"
I was going to do something very similar! (Score:2)
Oh, right. 'Cause I have to actually do it. Damn that procrastination...
My thought wasn't to put network traffic to music, but to sniff packets and generate tones of various waveforms based on the contents of those packets. I figured it would be a handy tool to get an overview of what the network was doing and to detect problems by ear.
Choice of warnings (Score:2)
Violins? Wouldn't it have been a better alert system to instead switch the music from, say, Vivaldi to, say, Apocalyptica [apocalyptica.com]?
Tch. I've been doing this for years. (Score:2)
Turn your speakers/headphones down before you start.
New era in status reports (Score:2)
Sysop: "Laaaaaa, li-li-li-laahh, LEEEEE, loooooo!"