While we do have computers and airplanes and spaceflight, if you take a pack of humans and a pack of tigers and drop them in the Savannah with only what they can make, even though the humans might be able to make clubs and plan strategy, they will likely loose to the tigers. Even more so if we had humans fighting apes, who, forgoing brain development, are much larger and stronger than we are. Sure, we have guns and huge cultures, but that did not help intelligence evolve in the first place. Sharks, while having been virtually unchanged for the entire history of mammals, are dumber than bricks. The same is true of cockroaches and alge; yet these species are evolutionarily successful. It could be that nearly every time a gang of extra-terrestrial Squidbirds mutate and devote a significant amount of energy to growing larger neurocluster polyps, they end up getting eaten by faster, stronger, stupider LandSharkAnemones.
It's just that on this one particular planet, a group a scavenger apes happened to grow larger brains at just the right time so that while the species around them where freezing in an ice age, they where saying, "hey, let's take the fur off of THOSE guys. By the time the ice age was over, those early years of relative weakness had vanished because the initial inherent weaknesses of intelligence (long childhood and huge food requirements, for instance) had been overcome by the advantages of group hunting and society. In fact, MXE could be essential to the development of intelegece by ensuring that complex life goes through occasional diversity explosions instead of stagnating in stable and simple ecologies. Oh, I should also say that we might not be first, but if we adjust for light speed, a civilization 1000 lightyears away will need to have developed radio a thousand years ago, and perhaps they only did 800 years ago. This naturally scales, so by around 10,000,000 LY away, there might be cultures with interstellar empires that are already extinct and we just haven't seen them yet. Oh, and ¿; I think what Jude is saying is that even if humans modify genetic code, it is still part of evolution- this may be true in a sense. I think it's debatable myself. I'd go on balance and say that artificial selection and engineering are both specialized forms of evolutionary processes.
PS: Yanlin, I believe that the number of planets with stars is closer to ~100%, and the don't go by "earth-like" go by chemically active worlds where replicating compounds can form, even if they use sulfur-silicon bonds and hydrochloric acid. I'd say there are at least five worlds like that orbiting Sol (Venus, Earth, Io, Europa, Titan), that number being perhaps ~20% of rocky "planets". Go with annother 20% of those generating life (of course, this could be as high as 40 or 60% depending on what we find.).