Come on people, this is for the good of human kind. It pretty much sits on your computer while you not busy and does a couple of calculations that could save someones life.Folding wrote: What is Folding@home? What is protein folding?
Folding@home is a distributed computing project, that very simply stated, studies protein folding and misfolding. Protein folding is explained in more detail in the scientific background section.
What is distributed computing?
Distributed Computing is a method of computer processing in which different parts of a program, or different portions of data, are processing simultaneously on two or more computers that are communicating with each other over a network or through the Internet.
Who "owns" the results? What will happen to them?
Unlike other distributed computing projects, Folding@home is run by an academic institution (specifically the Pande Group, at Stanford University's - Chemistry Department), which is a nonprofit institution dedicated to science research and education. We will not sell the data or make any money off of it.
Moreover, we will make the data available for others to use. In particular, the results from Folding@home will be made available on several levels. Most importantly, analysis of the simulations will be submitted to scientific journals for publication, and these journal articles will be posted on the web page after publication. Next, after publication of these scientific articles that analyze the data, the raw data of the folding runs will be available for everyone, including other researchers, here on this web site.
Why not just use a supercomputer?
Modern supercomputers are essentially clusters of hundreds of processors linked by fast networking. The speed of these processors is comparable to (and often slower than) those found in PCs! Thus, if an algorithm (like ours) does not need the fast networking, it will run just as fast on a supercluster as a supercomputer. However, our application needs not the hundreds of processors found in modern supercomputers, but hundreds of thousands of processors. Hence, the calculations performed on Folding@home would not be possible by any other means! Moreover, even if we were given exclusive access to all of the supercomputers in the world, we would still have fewer computing cycles than we do with the Folding@home cluster! This is possible since PC processors are now very fast and there are hundreds of millions of PCs sitting idle in the world.
Can I run Folding@home on a machine I don't own?
Please only run Folding@home on machines you either own or on which you have the permission of the owner to run our software. Any other use of Folding@home violates our license agreement (and just isn't a good idea in general).
What are the minimum system requirements?
All computers can contribute to Folding@home. However, if the computer is too slow (e.g. wasn't bought in the last 3-4 years or so), the computer might not be fast enough to make the deadlines of typical work units. A Pentium 3 450 MHz or newer equivalent computer (with SSE) is able to complete work units before they expire.
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Hey guys and girls, sorry I only realised now (Thanks spearone) that I have no instructions of how to join the team...
Anyway, its nice and simple, download the client (whether it be cpu, gpu or PS3), when you first run it, you should be greeted with a screen that has 3 inputs, a username, a team number and a passkey. For username, just enter the username you'd like to fold under (maybe using your forum name would be easiest, but the choice is yours), the team number is 128409 and the passkey can stay blank... thats only really for teams that don't want random people joining (we're not stingy ). And then thats it, click OK and you're on your way to helping us hopefully find cures for diseases
LATEST STATS - As of 04 May 2009
LATEST STATS - As of 13 May 2009Stanford Folding@Home Stats wrote: Team Ranking (incl. aggregate) 1333 of 157877
LATEST STATS - As of 09 June 2010Stanford Folding@Home Stats wrote: Team Ranking (incl. aggregate) 1187 of 158362
Stanford Folding@Home Stats wrote: Team Ranking (incl. aggregate) 768 of 158362