![Question :?:](./images/smilies/icon_question.gif)
![Question :?:](./images/smilies/icon_question.gif)
Thanks,
BrokenWolf
Moderators: Site Moderators, FAHC Science Team
Now that's dedication!BrokenWolf wrote:Thanks Bruce. After our city power comes back up (high winds brought a tree down on a power line and am using a generator right now) I will connect to work and verify the returned WU's.
Thanks,
BrokenWolf
.bruce wrote:Also noted elsewhere: The WUs from p6701 are not getting bonus points yet. The Pande Group is aware of the problem.
.PantherX wrote:noorman, just to clarify, what do you mean: (you may edit your post depending on your answer)
A) Do you mean that the WUs that were initially submitted while the Bonus Problem existed, and till now, you haven't received the correct Bonus?
B) You are still having problems with the 6701 WUs?
I have been getting Bonus points since the first P 6701 WU I got: (http://foldingforum.org/viewtopic.php?f ... 45#p147756)
Personally, even though the points for the p6701 WUs do seem to be low,kasson, Fri Jun 18, 2010 1:26 pm wrote: The deadlines are not related to the point value in any way. If people with capable machines are having trouble making the deadlines, we can certainly consider changing them. But the points values are deadline-independent (we correct for deadline-length in calculating the k-factor).
FYI, we re-ran the benchmark values on P6701 and got essentially the same points (base value would have been 920 instead of 921 on the second run, k-factor identical). It's possible that some of the other projects were overvalued; we could re-run and adjust those if there's a consensus in favor of doing so (but we usually don't like to take points lower unless there's something really wrong). I doubt there would be a change of more than 10% or so.
One thing to note is that most of the initial A3 projects were *very* similar to each other in terms of the molecular system involved. As we branch out to different types of systems and scientific projects, the scaling between our Core i5 benchmark machine and a given other machine may differ somewhat. (Things like cache size can become quite important.)
Wrish, Thu Apr 15, 2010 8:18 pm wrote: The benchmark i5-750 has the highest cache-to-thread ratio of any Nehalem (64K/256K/2 MB per thread), and the Lynnfield revision has the lowest latency to memory of any x86 CPU architecture (3-cycle L1, 8-cycle L2, 33 ns RAM @ 1600 Mhz). Therefore, an i5 750 is going to have the greatest advantage doing the most complex simulations.