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#1 |
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Over at the <a href="http://gnn.tigr.org" target="_blank">the Genome News Network</a>, there is an article about some biological imitators of <a href="http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu" target="_blank">SETI@home</a>.
<a href="http://folding.stanford.edu" target="_blank">Folding@Home</a> is about finding out how proteins fold into the shapes most suitable for their functions by doing molecular-dynamics (ball-and-spring-model) calculations. A straightforward calculation suggests a time longer than the age of the Universe for typical proteins, because a protein can have an enormous number of possible shapes, but proteins fold by going through a lot of intermediate shapes that are partially-folded, as this project's simulations reveal. Furthermore, increasing temperature will unfold many proteins, and this project has precisely predicted some proteins' folded fraction at different temperatures. The long-folding-time calculations are precisely parallel to calculations that purport to demonstrate that some protein or other could not have been a result of evolution, because its sequence is only one of an enormous number of similar-length random sequences. But just as a protein folds through intermediate stages, evolution through intermediates is much more probable, as is known from simulated-evolution experiments. One fun feature of that site is a map showing where the participants live -- there are interesting geographical patterns. <a href="http://GenomeAtHome.stanford.edu" target="_blank">Genome@Home</a> is a related project; it uses genome data to help design proteins with new functions. <a href="http://www.evolutionary-research.net" target="_blank">Evolution@home</a> is for doing simulations relevant to evolutionary biology. Currently, it is doing simulations associated with "Muller's Ratchet", a tendency for deleterious mutations to increase over time in asexual and small sexual populations. <a href="http://www.fightaidsathome.org" target="_blank">FightAIDS@Home</a> -- have your computer participate in an effort to find some drug that can interfere with AIDS-virus replication enzymes. |
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#2 |
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Join Date: Nov 2001
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At an internet company I used to own with some friends of mine, we had tons of excess CPU power and network bandwidth (due, unfortunately, to a lack of customers
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#3 |
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I would probably forgo my long-standing participation with SETI@home (196 units so far) in favor of any of these, as I believe they all have the potential for yielding greater real benefits. Unfortunately, none of them offer versions for my iMac. The one exception is Folding@home, but the only version offered is for OS X, which I don't use.
I suspect there are lots of Mac users who'd participate, if only they could. |
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#6 | |
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