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#313949 - 04/26/07 05:46 PM
All Good Things Must Come to an End
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I type Like navaho
Registered: 03/10/00
Posts: 25427
Loc: Texas
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"With seven years and five projects under its belt, Grid.org has successfully completed its mission: To evangelize the benefits (and demonstrate the viability and security) of large-scale Internet-based grid computing. Therefore, it is with great pride for all the accomplishments of this pioneering resource, and above all with the utmost gratitude to each of our members around the globe, that we announce Grid.org will be retiring on Friday, April 27, 2007." http://forum.grid.org/phpBB/viewtopic.php?p=599007I don't think 2 days is that much of a warning...  "Below are just a few of the projects we encourage you to investigate: > World Community Grid ( http://www.worldcommunitygrid.org/ ), operated by IBM > Distributed.net ( http://www.distributed.net/ ), operated by distributed.net > Compute Against Cancer ( http://www.computeagainstcancer.org/ ), operated by National Cancer Institute > Folding@Home ( http://www.stanford.edu/group/pandegroup/folding/ ), operated by Stanford University > fightAIDS@Home ( http://fightaidsathome.scripps.edu/ ), operated by Olson Lab at Scripps Research Institute > LHC@home ( http://athome.web.cern.ch/athome/ ), operated by CERN > Distributed Folding ( http://www.distributedfolding.org/ ), operated by a group of partners including Hogue Bioinformatics Research Lab, Mount Sinai Hospital, and University of Toronto > SETI@home ( http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/ ), operated by University of California at Berkeley Also, here are a few great sites to visit to learn more about these and other projects: > http://enterthegrid.com/ > http://gridcafe.web.cern.ch/gridcafe/gridprojects/fora.html > http://www.ogf.org/ > http://www.grid.org.il/ "
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#313956 - 04/26/07 06:08 PM
Re: All Good Things Must Come to an End
[Re: AllenAyres]
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I type Like navaho
Registered: 03/10/00
Posts: 25427
Loc: Texas
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Here's what appears to be final team points. We beat many many more prestigious teams - lots to be proud of  Rank Member Name Points Generated 1 Team 2ch 6,964,352,415 2 Easynews 4,701,298,797 3 DSL Reports Team Discovery 635,846,635 4 Dutch Power Cows against cancer 531,000,666 5 Vulture Central II 479,522,341 6 PCDVD 465,444,867 7 Intel Against Cancer 425,098,091 8 AMDZone.com 407,807,823 9 IBM Internal 381,728,223 10 [H]ardOCP 323,221,766 11 TiVo Users 319,416,652 12 Hungary 284,560,138 13 TECHSIDE.NET 231,762,672 14 Yen-e JAPAN 217,511,487 15 FatWallet 214,195,923 16 A UK PC against Cancer 207,677,173 17 Christians 201,461,711 18 Russia 198,977,307 19 saposapo 190,821,376 20 Poland 188,885,817 21 Ars Technica Team Crab Cake 182,299,139 22 Team Anandtech 175,752,250 23 Microsoft 170,401,040 24 Czech Republic 165,322,269 25 Team USA 156,806,409 26 Canadians (et Québécois) unite against Cancer 148,757,853 27 PC911 148,714,088 28 Athlonoc Taiwan 147,381,212 29 University of Hertfordshire 133,374,254 30 BitBenderTech 133,349,795 31 ukky 132,479,113 32 MyChat BBS 123,816,074 33 Zoo Taiwan Bad Cow 118,164,950 34 IBM 115,370,691 35 Lockergnome 108,673,421 36 WinTricks.it Italian Team 107,715,941 37 Team Germany 94,626,771 38 Muropaketti team 92,879,420 39 Portugal 92,512,487 40 Team UBBDev 91,584,829 41 Ex Mad Cows 88,414,960 42 Sheffield Hallam University 84,434,626 43 Sluggy Freelance 83,934,963 44 Order of the Blabbermouths 80,953,407 45 Sweden vs Cancer 76,813,104 46 NCTU Taiwan 75,665,274 47 The Exodus Crew 74,826,444 48 Finland 72,044,330 49 Team WinDrivers 71,222,778 50 Australia 70,538,836
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#313961 - 04/27/07 12:08 AM
Re: All Good Things Must Come to an End
[Re: AllenAyres]
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Wizard
Registered: 01/10/00
Posts: 5122
Loc: Portland, OR, USA
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Folding@HOME - (description on WikiPedia) Folding@home (also known as FAH or F@H) is a distributed computing project designed to perform computationally intensive simulations of protein folding and other molecular dynamics simulations. It was launched on October 1, 2000, and is currently managed by the Pande Group, within Stanford University's Chemistry department, under the supervision of Professor Vijay S. Pande. F@H is one of the largest distributed computing projects.[1] The goal of the project is "to understand protein folding, misfolding, and related diseases."[2] Accurate simulations of protein folding and misfolding enable the scientific community to better understand the development of many diseases, including Alzheimer's disease, BSE (mad cow disease), Cancer, Huntington's Disease, Cystic Fibrosis and other aggregation related diseases. [2] More fundamentally, understanding the process of protein folding — how biological molecules assemble themselves into a functional state — is one of the outstanding problems of molecular biology. So far, the F@H project has successfully simulated folding in the 5-10 microsecond range — a time scale thousands of times longer than was previously thought possible.[3] As of March 30, 2007, forty-nine scientific research papers have been published using the project's work.[4] A University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign report dated October 22, 2002 states that F@H distributed simulations of protein folding are demonstrably accurate.[5]
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