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Talk:Folding@home

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Former featured articleFolding@home is a former featured article. Please see the links under Article milestones below for its original nomination page (for older articles, check the nomination archive) and why it was removed.
Main Page trophyThis article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page as Today's featured article on November 1, 2012.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
December 6, 2006Featured article candidateNot promoted
January 11, 2007Featured article candidateNot promoted
August 17, 2010Good article nomineeNot listed
April 7, 2012Good article nomineeListed
May 29, 2012Peer reviewReviewed
October 25, 2012Featured article candidatePromoted
January 23, 2020Featured article reviewDemoted
Current status: Former featured article

Is this article "written like an advertisement?"

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I'm somewhat surprised to see this cleanup tag here, since this is a featured article. Does any part of this article need to be revised or rewritten? Jarble (talk) 16:46, 30 April 2019 (UTC)[reply]

I would say it should be cleaned up and rewritten. For one thing the article claims that F@H pioneered volunteer distributed computing, when Seti@Home was out long before F@H. Nabeel_co (talk) 19:48, 25 March 2020 (UTC)[reply]
I just removed the clean up tag. I think it is very well-written. Fangfufu (talk) 11:51, 4 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Folding@Home is a pioneer? Seti@home started way before Folding@home.

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"The project has pioneered" It didn't pioneer those things... It was notable, but projects like Seti@home, Electric Sheep, Distributed.net, and GIMPS all pre-dated Folding@home. It's true that the F@H client has probably taken advantage of more varied processor architectures than most projects, but they were far from the first for CPU or GPU distributed volunteer computing. This is so blatantly inaccurate, I'm surprised that it's on the second paragraph of a fairly popular Wikipedia article. Definitely needs correcting. Nabeel_co (talk) 20:03, 25 March 2020 (UTC)[reply]

 Done I also think the sentence after it is questionable since it uses "paradigm shift" in a broader context than the source. Tonystewart14 (talk) 03:30, 20 May 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Playstation3 has been deprecated as a supported client

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Please edit the main page, dropping the PLAYSTATION 3 from the list of supported devices. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.109.194.172 (talk) 03:16, 5 July 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Promotional article

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This reads like a highly promotional article, written to advertise Folding@home. Readers should be alerted that the prediction of protein structure, the hard-nose test for Folding@home has already been solved by a Google group. The problem has been solved using artificial intelligence by DeepMind, a company owned by Google. DeepMind developed the predictive tool AlphaFold that incorporates Rosetta input among many others to make their most accurate predictions of protein structure. AlphaFold has successfully predicted the structures of more than 200 million proteins from approximately 1 million species, covering virtually the entire protein universe.[1] TruchaForelle (talk) 22:44, 5 October 2022 (UTC)[reply]

AlphaFold and Folding@Home solve different kind of question. While AlphaFold returns the picture of a folded protein in its most energetically stable conformation, Folding@home returns a video of the protein undergoing folding, traversing its energy landscape.
An example article explaining the difference is here:
https://foldingathome.org/2020/12/08/protein-folding-and-related-problems-remain-unsolved-despite-alphafolds-advance/?lng=en Fangfufu (talk) 11:53, 4 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ Callaway E (July 2022). "The entire protein universe: AI predicts shape of nearly every known protein". Nature. 608: 15–16. doi:10.1038/d41586-022-02083-2.

By March 25 it reached 768 petaFLOPS, or 1.5 x86 exaFLOPS

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This sentence is wrong. 768 petaFLOPS are 0.768 exaFLOPS. Could we fix it? Pier4r (talk) 11:52, 30 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]