HaloJones wrote:Does Stanford say "Don't run this software unless you fold 24/7?"
As a matter of fact, yes, they do, in LARGE BOLD print on the High Performance download page. Not in those exact words, but the warnings and the VERY short deadlines easily translate to say run 24/7 or you won't make the deadlines, and so you won't get any points. That's a rather clear statement, run fast or no points.
HaloJones wrote:Does Stanford say "If you return this work faster, I'll give you more points?" No, it says make my deadline if you want the fixed amount of points.
Actually, that is your interpretation of Stanford's use of a deadline, not theirs. Vijay Pande, the project lead, has already stated the recommendation to run one fahcore per CPU core to return the work units as quickly as possible, because that is the most helpful to the project. Vijay has also posted (last year) how they are working on a points system adjustment to better align the points to the speed, i.e. he all but said a new bonus would be tied to how quickly you return a work unit.
HaloJones wrote:I fold 24/7 on my overclocked, water-cooled expensive machines and can run additional load yet still make the deadlines with vast amounts of leeway. The way I do it allows more units to be processed in faster times than all the occasional users who only run one fahcore per cpu. I can return to my single Win-SMp client that fully loads my quad yet produces 1700ppd or I can run the two Linux VMs with a Linux SMP unit in each and achieve >4000ppd. Or I could just return to Rosetta@Home and not have the all the hassle.
Sorry, this isn't about you, or only your machines. It's about all of us working together. You are more than welcome to maximize points, and just make the deadlines, as that is an acceptable contribution, just like the people with slower computers. But you are NOT helping the project optimally. Using the "slow guy comparison" excuse is not a good justification. RATE of WU completion is more important than COUNT of WU completion due to the serial nature of the work units.
Again, all contributions are welcomed, even those who just make the deadlines. This isn't a debate about right or wrong, just about what the project recommends as the optimal way to help the project, not the optimal way to earn points. Unfortunately, those two things are not perfectly aligned yet, but they are working on it.