Originally posted by: dnuggett
Well I'm not too discouraged after seeing the points earned. After one WU was completed it earned 47 points.
The more complex the WU, the more points you will get. You'll probably find that you'll get addicted to the statistics before too long.
😉
I've noticed others that have completed 9 and have less. I'm looking into the tweeks mentioned, but I'm confused with bgeh's suggestion. Does changing the download core restart a work in progress?
No, it will download the new core after it finishes and sends in the current work unit.
I also need a little more insruction on how to change this. Also w/ osage's suggestion what actual benefits are derived from FireDaemon, and what does it actually do?
On some workstations that use Windows 2000 (or Windows XP set up to use the secure login with CTRL+ALT+DEL), the system may sit at the login screen for an extended part of the day. Since the Folding@Home clients normally only run when someone is logged in, all that time during which the machine is sitting at the login screen is "wasted," in that F@H can not run. When the Command-Line client is set up with FireDaemon, it runs as a System Service (this only works on Windows NT, 2000, XP, and 2003 Server) which keeps going whether someone is logged in or not.
BTW how do I tell what version I am using?
If your client only kicks in when you're not using the computer, and shows fullscreen graphics until you move the mouse or press a key, you are using the Screensaver client. Please consider upgrading to one of the two listed below, as the Screensaver client is very slow and tends to suck.
If your client shows up as a small icon in your system tray, and can show a graphical window when you click on it, you are using the GUI, or Graphical User Interface client. This client is pretty good (about as fast as the CLI, and easier to use), and recommended as long as you don't need to run it as a System Service.
If your client shows up as a button in your task bar (along with your other applications), and when clicked on, displays a DOS-like window filled with text, then you are using the CLI, or Command Line Interface client. You can run it as a System Service if you desire, by following a link in our Folding@Home Getting Started Guide (which I will post a link to in here if you're interested). You can also "hide" it behind a small system tray icon using the program "Electron Microscope III" but there's not much benefit to using that versus just using the GUI client, as there is much more complexity with the CLI that you may not want to deal with.