Congrats!


top wrote:What does Folding@home do to your computer?
Helps to cure disease's...plus it gives Darkstar bragging rights...top wrote:What does Folding@home do to your computer?
http://folding.stanford.edu/Folding@home is a distributed computing project -- people from throughout the world download and run software to band together to make one of the largest supercomputers in the world. Every computer takes the project closer to our goals. Folding@home uses novel computational methods coupled to distributed computing, to simulate problems millions of times more challenging than previously achieved.
Closer to the second one, but the analogy is a bit off.top wrote:I've already read all that and watched the videos, but I still don't understand what the program actually does to your system. Is it sourcing power or CPU cycles to the project via the internet(if so, then how?) to cut off the amount of time in seeing protein movements or "folding"? Or is the program assigning the computer to work on a particular *part* of a misfolding of a particular(?) protein by using the computer's free CPU cycles and then sending the data to the network, kind of like if someone were to use a bit torrent to download a large file?
So is the data is already stored? And the folding pc decodes a fraction of the data then?Stanford send you a work unit to complete, which is a fraction of a second of a protien folding simulation (they have ones that missfold on purpose and others that dont, some I dont even think they know what will do)
Well yes and no...more no though. What they do is study how the protein folds and why it folds the way it does. By changing certain variables, the results can be drastically different. They can then analyze each result further.top wrote: EDIT: Woah wait a second[...]So is the data is already stored? And the folding pc decodes a fraction of the data then?