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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday April 15 2020, @01:24AM   Printer-friendly
from the folding-my-way-back-to-you dept.

So What Is Protein Folding, Anyway?:

The current COVID-19 pandemic is rife with problems that hackers have attacked with gusto. From 3D printed face shields and homebrew face masks to replacements for full-fledged mechanical ventilators, the outpouring of ideas has been inspirational and heartwarming. At the same time there have been many efforts in a different area: research aimed at fighting the virus itself.

Getting to the root of the problem seems to have the most potential for ending this pandemic and getting ahead of future ones, and that's the "know your enemy" problem that the distributed computing effort known as Folding@Home aims to address. Millions of people have signed up to donate cycles from spare PCs and GPUs, and in the process have created the largest supercomputer in history.

But what exactly are all these exaFLOPS being used for? Why is protein folding something to direct so much computational might toward? What's the biochemistry behind this, and why do proteins need to fold in the first place? Here's a brief look at protein folding: what it is, how it happens, and why it's important.

]...] Protein folding research is central to our understanding of so many diseases and infections that even once we figure out a way to beat COVID-19, the Folding@Home network, which as seen such explosive growth over the past month, will not go idle for long. The network is a research tool well-suited to exploring protein models central to dozens of diseases that are related to misfolded proteins, such as Alzheimer's and variant Cruetzfeldt-Jakob disease, often incorrectly called mad-cow disease. And when the next virus inevitably comes along, all that horsepower, and all the experience being gained in managing it, will be ready to go again.

I thought I had a good general idea of what protein folding was. And then this article made clear that there was much Much MUCH more to it than I had imagined! I found it to be written at just the right level to convey information without going into the weeds with too much detail; highly recommended!

For those who haven't heard of it before, folding@home is a way for people to donate unused CPU cycles towards protein folding calculations. If you decide to participate, soylentnews even has a team that you can join!


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  • (Score: 2) by RS3 on Wednesday April 15 2020, @02:33PM (2 children)

    by RS3 (6367) on Wednesday April 15 2020, @02:33PM (#983062)

    Thank you, makes absolute sense. I had played with the slot control, and used "task manager" to watch CPU utilization and it didn't change. I wonder if the work units are pre-programmed for single core and won't spread out to multiple cores? The bottom line is I didn't put much time into messing with it. And, my work units complete in much less time than allotted. All that said, I wonder if my machines are doing more good by doing 4 work units rather than 2?

    So again, why are some of my points being given to some team that's not in any of my settings?

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2  
  • (Score: 3, Informative) by Runaway1956 on Wednesday April 15 2020, @03:06PM (1 child)

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday April 15 2020, @03:06PM (#983079) Journal

    Time alloted is just a deadline. CPU or GPU, if you routinely butt up against the deadline, then there is most likely a problem. Most likely problem, is that the client is set to run only in idle, but the machine is never idle. The client looks for the screens to be shut off by power management, then it crunches, on windows.

    As for giving points to other teams? Go into FAHControl > configure > Identity > first box gets your name, second box gets SoylentNews team number (230319) and the passkey gets whatever passkey was emailed to you when you filled out this page: https://apps.foldingathome.org/getpasskey [foldingathome.org]

    If you make a typo in any of those boxes, your account won't be awarded the points, and SN may not get the points either. "Wasted" points aren't wasted, however. If FAH can't award the points any other way, they'll go to Anonymous. Example of an intentional "typo" is https://apps.foldingathome.org/teamstats/team230319.html, [foldingathome.org] scroll down far enough, and you will find Runaway1956NACL. That was a test account, to see how that Chrome native client worked, I made sure to get the points awarded to SN, but not to my main account.

    NOTE: When requesting a passkey at the address above, you must use your SoylentNews team member ID, and you must use a valid email that you can access at least once to recover the passkey. Throwaway emails are fine, if you can get into once, and then save your passkey.

    Not everyone may be aware of this, but the use of a passkey makes your work worth more points. I don't remember what the bonus is, but if interested, you can look it up.

    The passkey is pretty long, it's best to copy and paste it into the client. If necessary, you can copy paste into a text file, and move it from machine to machine.

    Hope that helps!

    • (Score: 2) by RS3 on Wednesday April 15 2020, @05:18PM

      by RS3 (6367) on Wednesday April 15 2020, @05:18PM (#983133)

      You're particularly good at explaining things. You will never be hired to write technical manuals. They're only meant to confuse and make work for tech support. :)

      /s

      Thank you again. I did most of that, but I didn't register and get a passkey. I might do that to get the bonus.

      Again, I erased and re-entered the username (same as here) and SN's 230319, but it still gives some points to some odd team. I can't figure out where FAH stores that info. If I could find that secret hiding place, I might be able to edit out the other team's ID.

      I'll uninstall FAH (after using "finish" command), try to clean up any "stuff" left behind, and try yet again.

      Thanks again, and thanks for running it so much and the high points you've gotten.