Answered hereAnd you try to make it less dire than it really is.
1. The FAQ I linked stated the i5 PPD was 6189 PPD. 850,000 PPD / 6000 PPD = about 140 systems to make that much PPD. How can the bonus should be a lot higher if the FAQ states the PPD IS 6189 PPD?
What, exactly, is the relative value of the various CPU clients?
THIS FAQ gives us some indication.
classic PPD = 100
SMP PPD = 1760
bigadv PPD = 2640
This would mean the classic to bigadv ratio is 1:26.4
If we divide the aforementioned 48 core bigadv machine's PPD (850,000) by that ratio we get the equivelent classic PPD value, which is 32,196.97 PPD
So how many classic folders would it take to get that PPD? I have an AMD @2.8 GHz that gets 575.96 PPD on classic Project 10720. That works out to 56 classic clients.
Does a single bigadv client = 56 classic clients?
Is a folder that turns in one massive WU every 20 hours equal to 56 Classic clients that each turn in one WU every 3.74 days?
In the time those 56 classic clients complete each of their WUs the bigadv machine will finish 4.5 WUs
Does that single bigadv WU = 12.5 classic WUs?
When you separate the points from the time and work done in that time you get very skewed results.
This is the second time you have made this error to show how ridiculous the increase in points has become.
By definition, ANY time bonus whatsoever will result in an exponential increase in PPD
The way you present the disparity in ppd, the only conclusion is that you are against any kind of QRB.
However, you say that you do support it and supported it when it was announced. Hence since nearly the very start of this thread VJ asked for people to crank the numbers, show the equations, and defend the results, rather than just pointing out the obvious; that the QRB returns exponential increases in points with the reduction of time.
I really really do not like the shape of this curve
However, just because I dislike exponential functions does not mean that they do not accurately reflect certain phenomenon.