That fell under the category of "not soon"©Nathan_P wrote:Well, its still better than Duke nukem forever time!!![]()

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That fell under the category of "not soon"©Nathan_P wrote:Well, its still better than Duke nukem forever time!!![]()
Bruce:bruce wrote:Scientists cannot predict that we'll ever run out of work. There are a lot of proteins that are too big to study with today's hardware -- and then there are interactions between proteins to be studied, etc.Jesse_V wrote:The protein folding problem continues, so theoretically there will always be more work to do.
That doesn't guarantee that you'll always get an assignment, though. Every research project starts with a proposal which is reviewed by several people before it's approved. Thus it's POSSIBLE that new projects might not always be approved before older ones end, but I've only occasional gaps when a there was a lull in projects for a particular platform.
The interview was seven years ago, and the guy's name was "Noah Johnson".Alan C. Lawhon wrote:Bruce:bruce wrote:Scientists cannot predict that we'll ever run out of work. There are a lot of proteins that are too big to study with today's hardware -- and then there are interactions between proteins to be studied, etc.Jesse_V wrote:The protein folding problem continues, so theoretically there will always be more work to do.
That doesn't guarantee that you'll always get an assignment, though. Every research project starts with a proposal which is reviewed by several people before it's approved. Thus it's POSSIBLE that new projects might not always be approved before older ones end, but I've only occasional gaps when a there was a lull in projects for a particular platform.
I have a question about the bolded part. I read the online transcript of an interview with Dr. Pande where he indicated that FAH is currently limited by a finite amount of computing power. (I'm paraphrasing a bit.) Dr. Pande went on to state, (I believe this was in an interview with a young man whose name might have been "Nicholas Johnson"), that "bigger projects" are envisioned which would require on the order of 500,000 CPUs and even bigger projects than that are envisioned which would require on the order of a million CPUs. (I assume these "bigger projects" involve efforts to model the largest and most complex protein molecules.)
bruce:bruce wrote:I've been reading your "Bold Idea" topic and watching it develop. I commend you for starting the discussion. You might also check out the topic Discussion: what is holding F@h back?
Yes, the bolded part of my quote implies that FAH needs computers that are a lot faster, a lot more computers, and continuously improving software that incorporate faster analysis methodology (whenever it happens to be invented). Even with the Celeb bump, FAH wouldn't be in danger of "finishing" any time soon. My answer to the original question is "never" but I suppose it would be more realistic to use the phrase "not in our lifetime."
Ten+ years ago, when FAH started, many believed that protein folding could only run on supercomputers since it could not be paralleled. (FAH demonstrated that they were wrong.) The growth since then has been phenomenal and I predict that one way or another, the trend will continue.
I don't think that's entirely accurate. I'd like to see where he said that, because I think you're misunderstanding what he meant. I recall this blog post on multiple simulations, but I don't think they do the entire simulation multiple times. Rather there's a lot of exploration in the individual simulation. See the Simulation FAQ and take a look at this picture: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:ACBP_ ... @home.tiffmmonnin wrote:Didn't Dr Pande say a protein is folded like 2000 times to get the most likely folded states? To appease us, PG could just send out more then 2000 per to keep us busy and we would be none the wiser. The the case of gaps between projects, it would be better to use server power to keep us happy and produce maybe a small bit of science than to let the user base go elsewhere.