2011/01/12 15:26:39
Electabots
Thought i'd stop being a lurker this one time and make a post heh. :)
Been folding/doing random distributed computing projects for a long time but just now joining team evga. I just like giving my computer something to do when it's not giving all its attention to me :P
 
My old 8800 gts 640mb is still churnin' through them WUs...
2011/01/12 23:47:47
unhappyelf
I guess I should formally introduce myself. I have been folding for team Engadget for many years, but a few months ago I introduced a friend of mine to EVGA's products and to folding@home. Some of you might know Great_Shovel, I showed him the light of EVGA products. I however never thought of looking at EVGA for its forums or Folding Team, he did. After finally upgrading to my 950 this christmas I decided to join EVGA's folding team to take advantage of the EVGA bucks program. Anyway to make a long story short(too late, I know) just wanted to say hello to everyone.
2011/01/13 06:29:20
zerran2001
Welcome everyone , Glad we brought a few more out of hiding
2011/01/13 12:21:13
paintforbreakfast
Hi Everyone,
I'm also a new folder and forum member on the team.  Been folding now for EVGA since mid December.  Already contemplating a second i7 rig dedicated to folding.  I appreciate the help and guides in this forum.  Thanks guys
2011/01/13 16:26:57
rklapp
unhappyelf
Some of you might know Great_Shovel,


Oh, you're to blame... I mean to thank.
 
2011/01/15 16:07:04
Brazen_NL
Hey guys, just added myself to list. However, I made a mistake: I chose the year 2010. 
Can someone correct this, please?
 
Also, Januari Janurary is misspelled.
 
I'm folding on only one machine using only the GPU until I get a full-fledged WC system in place.
2011/01/15 23:24:13
rklapp
Welcome. You'll find that folding will stress your systems much more than LinX overnight. Don't be surprised if you start losing bidadv wus after two days of processing. You may want to downclock to 4.0 if this starts to happen. In fact, don't use bigadv until you've finished your first 10 smp wus with the passkey. This will definitely tell you how stable your system is.
 
Come to think of it, I don't remember the last time I shut down and blew the computer. (I am serious... and don't call me Shirley.)
 
---
rklapp's links for the uninitiated:
---
To start with, try jedi95's FAH Tracker V2 explained here:
http://forums.evga.com/tm.aspx?m=219556
Use this to set up your cpu and gpu clients. I've decided to remove the individual client links that I used to have here because the FAH Tracker is easier to use. Keep checking for updates because jedi is the man!
---
Although pretty, don't open the Viewer. It slows down your clients and could cause your system to crash. If you want to play with pretty molecules, check out http://fold.it from my alma mater, University of Washington. Go Huskies!
---
Most i7 with 8 cores use bigadv after 10 WU are completed. Use 7 cores if running a fermi or mulitple gpus. When I'm pissed off at the 670x wus, then I shut off the smp client and run the uni-core client. Please do not delete wus because it messes with the server and makes more crappy work for the rest of us.
---
* FaH passkey (needed for smp bonus points)
http://fah-web.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/getpasskey.py
---
* HFM.net (use to monitor each of your clients and smp bonus points)
http://hfm-net.googlecode.com/files/HFM%20Release%200.5.1.198.msi
---
Highlites from Pande's 2010 lecture and his quest for exaflops:
http://forums.evga.com/tm.aspx?high=&m=632909
---
If you're wondering how points are assigned, read the FAQ:
http://folding.stanford.edu/English/FAQ-Points
---
Problems uploading your wu to Stanford, check out the server status:
http://fah-web.stanford.edu/serverstat.html
---
Acronyms:
PPD = Points Per Day (How you measure the client's performance. The uni-core client will net you about 300 PPD while the bigadv client is over 25k PPD.)
WU = Work Unit (The number that Stanford assigns each project.)
TPF = Time Per Frame (How long it takes to process 1%.)
GROMACS = The programming core that Stanford uses. www.gromacs.org
rklapp = PPD/watt for each client. This is how I measure the folding efficiency of each computer device.
http://forums.evga.com/fb.ashx?m=531159
2011/01/16 00:34:03
percman24601
I guess I failed. I missed this thread and made another.
2011/01/16 00:37:44
rjbelans
Don't worry we like lots of threads (SPAM) to keep us busy.
2011/01/16 03:15:17
Brazen_NL
Thanks for the tips. I've been folding a bit for Guru3D when I hung out there. Since I now only read the articles there and read this forum a lot more, I joined EVGA.

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