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huffnpuff
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February 14, 2016, 07:02:40 AM Last edit: February 14, 2016, 07:31:17 AM by huffnpuff |
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Any idea if a pi cluster could work fine at folding? I don't believe the raspberry pi's ARM processor is supported for Folding@Home except for Android phones ... I've read about people using MSFT compute sticks or you can pick up a cheap used laptop (like one with a cracked screen), and use it to fold NaCl and concurrently staking your wallet. I just learned about JaguarBoard (Intel x86 based raspberry pi alternative) This might actually work ... for VERY lightweight folding. The only thing I would think a pi II could be used for, is to run the Android 4.4+ client for folding (no CureCoins from that client however... You probably already realize that even a 10 year old PC can be fitted with a modern video card, and put up some decent numbers. Check out the folding calculator for PC, Mac or cloud equipment. That being said, your goals are probably cost and power efficiency ... like having a small device installed inline with each light bulb socket in the house - contributing to research and earning CURE.
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valkir
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February 15, 2016, 01:03:28 AM |
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Hum well I really wanted to create a pi cluster learning at the same time. Will try to check with the pine 64
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██ Please support sidehack with his new miner project Send to :
1BURGERAXHH6Yi6LRybRJK7ybEm5m5HwTr
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ryohazuki89
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February 17, 2016, 10:29:43 PM |
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Thanks assistresearch.
I see that gridcoin has a lot of protein folding BOINC projects listed in their whitelist: GPUGRID: Full-atom molecular simulations of proteins. Poem@Home: Models protein folding using Anfinsen's dogma. FIND@Home: docking simulations on malaria proteins
How does Folding@Home differ from these?
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wilding2004
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February 18, 2016, 08:38:59 AM |
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Thanks assistresearch.
I see that gridcoin has a lot of protein folding BOINC projects listed in their whitelist: GPUGRID: Full-atom molecular simulations of proteins. Poem@Home: Models protein folding using Anfinsen's dogma. FIND@Home: docking simulations on malaria proteins
How does Folding@Home differ from these?
Folding@Home is a more mature project, its been running for over 15 years. It leads the field in developing new methods of simulation. It has the most reliable/useful software client, and more published research than all the projects you mentioned combined. Basically everything used in the world of protein folding DCN's was primarily developed because of the Folding@home project. It was a collaboration between F@H and ATi over 10 years ago that first looked at the possibilty of usings gpu's to do work that had always previously been done on a single core cpu. It was F@H that developed the systems to use multicore cpus
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merc84
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February 20, 2016, 07:00:19 AM |
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The problem is due to the pre-mine that is allocated for folding payouts, this will only be fixed after cc2.0 launches.
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huffnpuff
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February 20, 2016, 08:41:48 AM |
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Thanks assistresearch.
I see that gridcoin has a lot of protein folding BOINC projects listed in their whitelist: GPUGRID: Full-atom molecular simulations of proteins. Poem@Home: Models protein folding using Anfinsen's dogma. FIND@Home: docking simulations on malaria proteins
How does Folding@Home differ from these?
Folding@Home is a more mature project, its been running for over 15 years. It leads the field in developing new methods of simulation. It has the most reliable/useful software client, and more published research than all the projects you mentioned combined. Basically everything used in the world of protein folding DCN's was primarily developed because of the Folding@home project. It was a collaboration between F@H and ATi over 10 years ago that first looked at the possibilty of usings gpu's to do work that had always previously been done on a single core cpu. It was F@H that developed the systems to use multicore cpus Very good points Wilding2004 ... Folding@Home and Rosetta@home are often referred to as "complementary", however on a sheer level of computational research power, Folding@Home overshadows all BOINC projects combined (including the non-medical ones) in terms of PFLOPS by nearly 2.4x today (it has been over 4x within the last 18 months). So that in part determines the number of computations represented by each coin - if that helps. Some projects like GPUGRID are great, but have been known to occasionally run out of work, but that doesn't make their research any less interesting. I would say if you want to throw some power at some of those, it only helps the overall cause. I do it too - but coin-wise, I'm biased to CURE - I do buy GRID opportunistically just to stay diversified like assistresearch says.
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wilding2004
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February 20, 2016, 09:06:57 AM |
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Thanks assistresearch.
I see that gridcoin has a lot of protein folding BOINC projects listed in their whitelist: GPUGRID: Full-atom molecular simulations of proteins. Poem@Home: Models protein folding using Anfinsen's dogma. FIND@Home: docking simulations on malaria proteins
How does Folding@Home differ from these?
Folding@Home is a more mature project, its been running for over 15 years. It leads the field in developing new methods of simulation. It has the most reliable/useful software client, and more published research than all the projects you mentioned combined. Basically everything used in the world of protein folding DCN's was primarily developed because of the Folding@home project. It was a collaboration between F@H and ATi over 10 years ago that first looked at the possibilty of usings gpu's to do work that had always previously been done on a single core cpu. It was F@H that developed the systems to use multicore cpus Very good points Wilding2004 ... Folding@Home and Rosetta@home are often referred to as "complementary", however on a sheer level of computational research power, Folding@Home overshadows all BOINC projects combined (including the non-medical ones) in terms of PFLOPS by nearly 2.4x today (it has been over 4x within the last 18 months). So that in part determines the number of computations represented by each coin - if that helps. Some projects like GPUGRID are great, but have been known to occasionally run out of work, but that doesn't make their research any less interesting. I would say if you want to throw some power at some of those, it only helps the overall cause. I do it too - but coin-wise, I'm biased to CURE - I do buy GRID opportunistically just to stay diversified like assistresearch says. Agreed. Most of the protein simulation DCN's are doing similar science, but sometimes the smallest difference can be significant. For example Rosetta@home is primarily concerned with determining the final folded state of a protein, whereas Folding@home simulates the stages prior to the final state in order to understand the role of "mis-folding" in disease.
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wilding2004
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February 20, 2016, 04:39:35 PM |
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Does anyone have any idea why Cure withdrawals and deposits are temporarily disabled on Poloniex?
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xandry
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Crypto Swap Exchange
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February 20, 2016, 06:27:49 PM |
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Does anyone have any idea why Cure withdrawals and deposits are temporarily disabled on Poloniex?
Some strange problems...
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FifthGhostbuster
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February 21, 2016, 04:02:11 AM |
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I had the same thing happen to me. Been waiting about 20 hours for confirmation and 9 hours for a response from support.
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Go CureCoin!
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cryptonit
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bit.diamonds | uNiq.diamonds
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February 21, 2016, 05:35:23 PM |
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how that exchange price raise but no news?
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bitcoinrocks
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February 28, 2016, 07:27:51 PM Last edit: February 28, 2016, 08:34:23 PM by bitcoinrocks |
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I really like the concept of this coin. Are there any other similar projects? GridCoin seems like one.
Are there any catalysts on the horizon for a big price rise?
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merc84
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February 28, 2016, 10:35:26 PM |
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I really like the concept of this coin. Are there any other similar projects? GridCoin seems like one.
Are there any catalysts on the horizon for a big price rise?
The eventual release of CC2.0 could trigger a rise in price but how big remains to be seen.
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bitcoinrocks
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February 28, 2016, 11:46:15 PM |
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What will be the biggest changes in 2.0?
BTW, what creates demand for this coin?
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cryptohunter2
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February 28, 2016, 11:59:22 PM |
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this coin could have really been a top 10 coin. The development is snail paced.
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merc84
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February 29, 2016, 08:34:49 AM |
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What will be the biggest changes in 2.0?
BTW, what creates demand for this coin?
I don't understand how CC2 will work did Stanford or other scientific researcher/university even agree to be a CA/issue curecoins ? how is the testing going? there is sometimes talks about CC2 and then weeks of silence. i can understand the development can take a very long time what is wrong with current model and coin (besides not getting security updates lately, and premine which folders community currently trust) will exchanges accept CC2 ?
No DCN has agreed to be a CA yet; the initial 2.0 release will be us signing certificates for publicly-verifiable stats pulled directly from the DCNs. As the project gains momentum and Curecoin-related computation accounts for a higher and higher amount of their computational power, the hope is they will take over as CAs. Testnet is going great! There's a beta a few posts up with binaries to try out, and we just added PoS. The current, 1.0 coin has a premine that we payout from, and doesn't offer anything interesting (in regards to the technology itself) that sets Curecoin apart from any other cryptocurrency. We believe the features in 2.0 (Quantum-computer-resistant signatures, a ledger that grows in size with the number of addresses in active use rather than the number of transactions on the network (as in, if the number of users stays constant, and they all use the same number of addresses as they did earlier, the network doesn't take additional storage to run), and a jigsaw-stacking blockchain to prevent forking will interest people beyond the main goal of incentivising computational research. As much as possible, 2.0 will adhere to the exact same RPC calls that 1.0 does, to make it easier for exchanges to trade it. To summarize the main points of difference, removal of pre-mine for folding payouts and removal of sha-256 mining component in exchange for a certificate based model for coin generation. Quantum computer resistance, reduction in block chain size and forking prevention. Also the possible inclusion of other DCN's in addition to Folding@home. There's probably some other points not in this post but they aren't all that hard to find in the previous 10 pages or so. Unfortunately currently there is not a lot creating demand for this coin, it is accepted by coinpayments.net but it hardly makes sense to purchase btc to trade to curecoin to pay for something using coinpayments. I did make a post a few pages back about demand which I will quote some of below. "Something that has been discussed in the past is the possibility of DCN's (decentralized computing networks) providing buy pressure to encourage more users to contribute computing time. CC2.0 is certainly a step in the direction of making this idea more plausible though in reality it seems unlikely that stanford would pay anything for something they already get for free. I personally am in favor of the idea that DCN's pay some small amount in the form of buy pressure for curecoin in order to encourage miners away from wasteful pow and towards their own DCN, if the DCN could get the same results as they would hiring or running expensive supercomputers for less money by supporting curecoin it seems like a win-win to me" Otherwise the only real buy pressure comes from speculators or those inclined to purchase on a philanthropic basis to encourage more contribution to Folding@Home.
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bitcoinrocks
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March 03, 2016, 10:55:06 PM |
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Otherwise the only real buy pressure comes from speculators or those inclined to purchase on a philanthropic basis to encourage more contribution to Folding@Home.
Looking at the historical price of this coin, it's relatively stable. There is no new and significant functionality or utility to look forward to in the future so buying on speculation of a price rise doesn't make sense. "Miners" (folders?) must be constantly dumping to pay the bills so the price should be on a steady decline, but it isn't. Is philanthropy really the explanation for this?
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