recommend me a life sciences project...

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Overkiller

Platinum Member
Feb 22, 2003
2,461
0
0
Fad and F@H are both great. I could not get FAD to run properly on 2 separate systems.

F@H has worked fine (along with seti, SoB, dpad) on the other hand.

Best of luck in whatever you choose!
 

GLeeM

Elite Member
Apr 2, 2004
7,199
128
106
Try Folding@Home on a newer P4.

Get the new client here: http://folding.stanford.edu/beta/
It's the same stable old version but with some added features!

Can be run as a service.

During configuration set to get WU >5 MB, answer yes to advanced and then yes to advmethods.

:)

EDIT: TeAm number is 198
 

Kelemvor

Lifer
May 23, 2002
16,928
8
81
Since most things are switching to that BOINC thing, I'm running Predictor@Home. It's similar to Folding but not exactly the same.

Why/How is Predictor@Home different from Folding@Home, both seem to be addressing the same objectives?

Protein structure prediction starts from a sequence of amino acids and attempts to predict the folded, functioning, form of the protein either a priori, i.e., in the absence of detailed structural knowledge, or by homology with other known, but not identical, proteins. In the case of the a priori folding, it is a blind search based on the sequence alone. Homology modeling first identifies other proteins of known structure with some level of sequence identity to the unknown structure and then constructs a prediction for the unknown protein by homology. Both approaches utilize multi-scale optimization techniques to identify the most favorable structural models and are highly amenable to distributed computing. Predictor@Home is the first project of this type to utilize distributed computing for structure prediction. Predicting the structure of an unknown protein is a critical problem in enabling structure-based drug design to treat new and existing diseases.

Protein folding studies and the characterization of the protein folding process are based on knowledge of the final folded protein structure (in Nature) and aims to understand the process of folding, beginning from an unfolded protein chain. The endpoint of these studies is a comparison between native protein (in nature). Analysis of the folding process too is a critical outcome allowing theories for protein folding to make direct connections to experimental measurements of this process. The Folding@Home project pioneered the use of distributed computing to study the folding process. Understanding the folding process is of significance in understanding the origin of diseases that arise from protein mis-folding, such as Alzheimer's disease and Mad-Cow disease.

Both approaches explore protein structure and folding, but with complementary aims.