Intel Core i5 2500K PPD

Win7 won't make any difference, the Folding code is still 32bit.
Thank the Lord for that, I don't know if its just me but Win7 seems too full of pretty pretty bloat without much good reason.

Sorry can't help on the performance of that WU I dont have a record of having done any on my rigs, I just updated the SMP machines to 6.34 client so maybe will get one soon but they are no where near as nice as a 2500K but are quad core and should give something to compare. lopkinfop should have more data on ones he has done.

As for stats, people tend to use HFM.NET rather than FAHMon as you get more data from it.

Biffa no need to be sorry & thanks for trying, I'm more than grateful for the help you've already been. I've never been all that bothered about creating a db of F@H PPD primarily because all the WUs I seem to do are pretty much the same consequently there hasn't been a need however that does need to change now. :)

I'll take a look at HFM.NET TBH I've never heard of that, but I'm willing to give it a go. :cool:

Thanks very much again :)
 
First SMP gone :D

Well God Bless Standford, they've sent me one now that doesn't appear to exist in the Stats P: 7200 :rolleyes: :cool: Well @ least, I can't follow the PPD on this one. :D
 
It's great innit :D I've reported on Stanfords forum about 45 Mins ago, I'm not expecting a rushed reply though, I had a bit of a ding dong with 7im last night followed by PMs from Bruce trying to take what bit of ""heat"" :rolleyes: there was out of the situation. :cool:
 
I had 3 of those one after another as my first 3 on my CPU, had me really confused! :o


Just found it, the information is incomplete though, I've got a finish time, but no frame time or PPD


Project 7200
Project 7200 The goal of this project is to study the mechanism of activation of the signaling protein Nitrogen Regulatory Protein C (NtrC) in atomic detail. NtrC is a prototype system in which the conformational change is key to regulating signal transduction in bacteria. The protein is capable of interconverting between two biologically important conformations, and this conformational change is crucial for its signaling function. Understanding the details of the mechanism of interconversion will help us elucidate one of the most frequent bacterial signal transduction pathways.

Additional Details
Points 484
Preferred Deadline 8 days
Final Deadline 12 days
This project uses the GRO-A4 FAH core software and is hosted by Folding@home server 129.64.95.82
Managers for this FAH project: This project is maintained by Francesco Pontiggia (pontiggi) and Dimitar Pachov (dpachov), researchers in the laboratory of Prof Dorothee Kern at Brandeis University. The focus of the research activity at Kern Lab is the characterization of internal motions that are at the basis for the function of biological macromolecules, with combined use of NMR experiments and molecular dynamics simulations
 
Flipping eck Biffo I didn’t realise that you are such a man (Oop person) of action
http://fah-web.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/main.py?qtype=teampage&teamnum=10

Hats off to both you & the OCUK team, I wish the team that I created had so many hot actives, mind, I suppose a Renault Motor forum isn’t an ideal place to start a F@H team.

I’ve got fair amount of 1 WU wonders, & I’m guessing they expect instant gratification & when it dawns on them it simply doesn’t happen that way, they quit.


Have you seen the progression of this one horse team? Well I say one horse, the guy last time I looked got 700 PCs Folding under his name


View on FAH Stats
http://fah-web.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/main.py?qtype=teampage&teamnum=213904


View on EOC Stats :eek: It looks like he hasn't been going too long

http://folding.extremeoverclocking.com/user_list.php?s=&t=213904

 
Heh, whiling away the hours gazing at stats will make you go blind you know... or is that something else.. I can't see my notes... :o
 
Heh, whiling away the hours gazing at stats will make you go blind you know... or is that something else.. I can't see my notes... :o

My Dad told me that when I was 15. Mom told me @ 16. Friend's told me by 17, a lot of my friend are dead & gone now, so I don't see it myself. :D
 
i recently switched back to folding after doing a bit of rosetta and i'm not getting 40k ppd any more. after a bit of a google it seems they were the 80xx wus with the a4 core, they have now been neutered and have around 40% of their previous ppd, i'm getting 15k from a 2500k at 4.8GHz
 
I can't get anywhere near 15k PPD out of an smp :weep: approx 10k PPd from the CPU although I'm also getting just over 17k PPd from a GPU
 
Sorted 100% load :D

Although embarrassingly, I don't know what I did different :o
Very belated answer but I had exactly the same situation a couple of days ago. I think what happened was that you ran the client and configured it on the fly so the -smp flag wasn't able to take effect and the client just ran on the one core it started with. You then restarted the client so the configuration took effect and all the core started up. I normally use a shortcut with the -configonly flag to configure the client so hadn't spotted this before and it confused the **** out of me for a minute.
 
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