twizzle wrote:I'd actually made that post in the "number of active folders going down?" thread, as I was wondering if this was because the failure rate had increased leading to people dropping out. ie. If Fahclient V6 defaults to single threading and works, then people install fahclient7 with SMP and it stops "producing the goods" as it were, the work won't be carried out. And with the release of Core17 for GPU's, this stopped my boxes dead - so I stopped providing GPU slots...
No single factor can account for the huge drop of active folders. They are many (which are already mentioned in that thread). This could play a part but to what extent, is anybody's guess. If you want to get Non-FahCore_17 WUs on your GPU, you can still download GPU3 v6.41 Client (
http://folding.stanford.edu/home/download2011). From what I have read online, it seems that the upgrade from v6 to V7 happens only because of new features or bug fixes. Thus, there are still plenty of donors using v6. Moreover, for new donors, there is a new release being tested which makes it easy for them to see how their system is performing (viewtopic.php?f=94&t=25657).
twizzle wrote:...Since making the post, however, I found the points report and see that the top few percent of folders are providing almost all of the system resources. So... people like me with some spare processing time don't really affect the throughput given that the people at the pointy end contribute more in a few hours than I have contributed in six months...
What I would say is that the Science counts. You are contributing valid science, just like any other donor thus all your contributions are valued. To put it in another manner, a billionaire could donate a million Dollars to a charity organization while an average Joe, a few bucks. The bottom line is that both made a contribution to charity and thus, have made a difference. This is much better option than to not give charity at all.
twizzle wrote:...But given that most of the contributions are from GPU's, it would be very interesting to see how much home users are contributing to CPU/GPU folding, and if the loss of contributors is having a real effect on the ability to carry out research.
The definition of home user varies from person to person. A home system can be an ultra-portable for one but a multi-GPU rig for another. Since the FLOPS are roughly constant, I would say that so far, it hasn't impacted the ability to do Science (this might be an oversimplification).