Message boards : Number crunching : Credit always low
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Chilean Send message Joined: 16 Oct 05 Posts: 711 Credit: 26,694,507 RAC: 0 |
Yeah, I don't know what the whole problem is... I crunch Collatz with my video cards and get about 5,000 RAC so far. While I get ~2000 RAC in rosetta@home, but I find my contribution to rosetta way more beneficial, even though I don't get the same amounts of credit. BTW, it comes in handy to compare your stats with people crunching IN THE SAME PROJECT. I'll keep crunching collats with my GPUs until Rosetta finds a way to develop a GPU application. |
Bikermatt Send message Joined: 12 Feb 10 Posts: 20 Credit: 10,552,445 RAC: 0 |
I have been following this thread and a part of me really wants to be angry at the people that whine about credit. Anyone who has had any biology can tell you that proteins are what allows life to exist. The other thing they can tell you is that in biology structure equals function. Having knowledge of protein structure and how they function will benefit every living organism on this planet! I think Chris: "I just look at credits as being a benchmark as to how well I am doing within a project and as a measure of what I am accomplishing for the project. And with the credit structure they have setup here it can also serve as a flag when something is not working right (see the long running work unit discussion)" and JackOnTheRox: "I keep track of my accumulation and RAC, and compare it to the others around me to keep it interesting, but I crunch here because I hope the research makes a difference." gave the best reasons for credit. But if raising the credit could bring in a few more credit whores that would equal more models produced right? "Another 'theory' is that if you keep the credits low the 'credit whores' won't come and make the server work extra hard. Just the people that 'believe' in the idea of your project will come and since they are always going to be here the server load stays fairly steady. More credits means more people meaning more work for the project and that can mean more monetary expenditures. Credits ARE low here, but they may plan it that way." But then mikey’s comment brings up a very good point: So is there any way some kind cost benefit analysis can be performed? How much throughput could be gained by raising the awarded credit and what would it cost in server time? And can the project accept monetary contributions? I know a lot of other projects ask. You never know, you might have some crunchers around here that wouldn’t mind giving a few bucks to help with buying a little more sever power. Anyway, just my thoughts, I imagine the last question is the only one that can be easily answered. |
Chris Holvenstot Send message Joined: 2 May 10 Posts: 220 Credit: 9,106,918 RAC: 0 |
Hell, I'd rather give it to the Rosetta project than the IRS ... |
mikey Send message Joined: 5 Jan 06 Posts: 1895 Credit: 9,208,737 RAC: 3,249 |
Unfortunately I have not found a project that takes tax deductible donations yet! If they did they might find more money than they knew what to do with, and what a predicament that would be! Bikermatt I too crunch for a project that gives lower credit than some others, Malaria, and I too do it for the Science! Choosing where to put our resources becomes harder and harder as more projects come online, but increases the fun level! It also means we need more pc's so we can adequately contribute to each project!! |
Mod.Sense Volunteer moderator Send message Joined: 22 Aug 06 Posts: 4018 Credit: 0 RAC: 0 |
...can the project accept monetary contributions? You can click the [home] link at the top of any message board webpage and then click the "Donate" link at the bottom of the "Join Rosetta@home" links. The link describes the foundation that has been established and deductability of your donation. Rosetta Moderator: Mod.Sense |
mikey Send message Joined: 5 Jan 06 Posts: 1895 Credit: 9,208,737 RAC: 3,249 |
...can the project accept monetary contributions? I did not know that, THANKS!! |
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Number crunching :
Credit always low
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