Let me attempt to describe this in a different manner... the projects in question are specifically created for COVID Moonshot (https://covid.postera.ai/covid).cine.chris wrote:...My impression was that recent WUs weren't responding consistently and yielding poor results.
Honestly, I just got the feeling my efforts were being wasted by some grad student that couldn't configure their WUs correctly.
As a retired aerospace engineer, I don't like the feeling that my skills, time, $$$, kWHr are being wasted, when all I expected to see was an accurate & consistent metric. if the metric is broken, I begin to question the process...
Think that the current scientific community wants to create a light bulb. However, no human has created the light bulb. So, a group of scientists decided to join together and test various ideas on how to create a light bulb. Of course, there will be ideas that will fail. Those failures will be used as learning and applied in a continuous learning manner to improve their next set of ideas. If they perform enough iterations, they will began to find ideas that fail (and they can avoid them in the inception stage as opposed to the development/test stage), ideas that might be suitable and ideas that are great. The more they do this, the better the next set of ideas are and they will reach the goal of creating the light bulb that the scientific community wants and that it can be shared across the globe without issues.
In science, failures in experiment isn't a setback, instead, it's an opportunity to learn more about something that they don't know. The key is to not give up (https://www.uky.edu/~eushe2/Pajares/OnFailingG.html). That is what the researchers behind Project 1340X are doing. The failures are generating valuable scientific data which they can use. It's only a matter of time before they have sufficient data and can make massive progress