Take a look on the Folding at Home results board for that massively scoring member named P_133_6_10_02_10PM, Prof.
If I am any guess, that is Clocker's ultra-powerful Pentium 133, overclocked to 133MHz. I'd say he started that work unit at 2:10PM on the 10th of June, that he's running it 24 hours a day, and that monster machine of his has finished a 0.6 point work unit already! Wow! Only four days!
(I wonder how long it would take to complete a ProteinA? )
You had a pretty small protein to calculate. However, I think it took around 3½ days for your P5-133 to finish it, so in theory, you blew up the timer for this one anyway. Nice to see the F@h server gives us credit even when it takes us a bit too much time before the work is shipped somewhere else.
Of course my P133 is running as a file server but this mean beast completes a frame in 215 minutes. That's a projected total calculation time of 15 days for a proteinAg29a.
Hmmmmm. Tannin has some working 386SX-16 boards I could borrow. Is there a world record for the slowest ProteinA? Ahh, come to think of it, I'd have to find one with a co-pro. That might be a little tricky. He's got a 386DX-40 with a co-pro. That might do. Ahh! What about a 486SLC-25? I know he's got SLC/2-50s and 66s. Some of those have co-pros. Could probably put the co-pro onto an SLC-25 board. Rough, off the top of my head estimate: ProteinA: 12 to 18 months. Should I experiment?
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