Programming background of community

Moderators: Site Moderators, FAHC Science Team

Years of programming experience

0
7
21%
1
1
3%
2
0
No votes
3
0
No votes
4
2
6%
5+
23
70%
 
Total votes: 33

P5-133XL
Posts: 2948
Joined: Sun Dec 02, 2007 4:36 am
Hardware configuration: Machine #1:

Intel Q9450; 2x2GB=8GB Ram; Gigabyte GA-X48-DS4 Motherboard; PC Power and Cooling Q750 PS; 2x GTX 460; Windows Server 2008 X64 (SP1).

Machine #2:

Intel Q6600; 2x2GB=4GB Ram; Gigabyte GA-X48-DS4 Motherboard; PC Power and Cooling Q750 PS; 2x GTX 460 video card; Windows 7 X64.

Machine 3:

Dell Dimension 8400, 3.2GHz P4 4x512GB Ram, Video card GTX 460, Windows 7 X32

I am currently folding just on the 5x GTX 460's for aprox. 70K PPD
Location: Salem. OR USA

Re: Programming background of community

Post by P5-133XL »

Obviously this community is where really old programmers go to die. An elephant graveyard so to speak.

:ewink: :lol: :ewink:
Image
Punchy
Posts: 125
Joined: Fri Feb 19, 2010 1:49 am

Re: Programming background of community

Post by Punchy »

I created an expanded version of this poll since a lot of information seems to be lost in the 5+ category.

viewtopic.php?f=16&t=23105
bruce
Posts: 20824
Joined: Thu Nov 29, 2007 10:13 pm
Location: So. Cal.

Re: Programming background of community

Post by bruce »

As I'm sure you know, any survey you conduct here is statistically unsound because of the small sample size.

There are LOTS of Donors with lesser technical skills who never join the forum.

I know of no way to "prove" my unsubstantiated assertions, but I believe the following:
1) FAH is more likely to attract technically oriented folks that other DC projects.
2) Those who register for and become active on foldingforum.org tend to be a more the more technically oriented subset of the total FAH community.
3) More technically oriented individuals tend to develop programming skills.

[off-topic]Speaking now from the perspective of providing technical support to the Donor community as a whole, my goal is to provide whatever kind of support fits the situation. That means explaining things in much greater detail to the non-technically oriented person than the so-called "expert." It's often difficult to know which type of answer is needed and we do get follow-up questions from newbies saying they don't know how to do "X" and we also are faulted by a few "experts" for "talking down to them." I guess that means we're taking a reasonable middle road most of the time.[end-of-diversion]
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