๐ What Are We Doing With Unused Computational Power?
Folding protein, of course! + VERY important insight about the state of market sent only to paid subscribers.
To Smart Investors,
Jackโs note: Iโm sending a VERY important alert about the broad market to the paying subscribers after this email.
Just a quick heads up; unrelated to finance.
While working on the new service, I decided to do something cool!
When our supercomputer is unused or not used to full capacity, we donate the computational power to Folding@Home.
We are currently the 18th fastest cluster on the planet out of hundreds of thousands that are folding protein.
You can look at our live stats.
We are a part of the fantastic Redditโs /r/homelab team.
Because we have very powerful hardware, we are folding incredibly complex protein like this one:
What is Folding@Home?
What Is Protein Folding?
Iโm not pretending to understand everything, but it seems very legitimate. The project started at Stanford University, and it has since moved to the University of Pennsylvania.
My friend at DeepMind advised me that Folding@Home is currently the best way to contribute our idle GPUs and CPUs.
We contribute computational power to folding protein related to various cancers, including Alzheimerโs, diabetes, Huntingtonโs, Influenza, and Parkinsonโs.
People have received Nobel prizes for discovering this method, and have recently discovered the AIDS-suppressing drug, a malaria vaccine, among others.
With every good wish, I remain
Yours sincerely in Christ,
Rev. Jack Roshi
Applied Mathematics Department, MIT
Lead Quant and Board Member, Alpha LLPOpinions are my own