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Gaming = Nobel?

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jingXD
Profile Joined May 2007
United States283 Posts
Last Edited: 2008-05-10 18:24:20
May 10 2008 18:23 GMT
#1
Just saw this on digg/slashdot.
Article Link

+ Show Spoiler +
Computer Game's High Score Could Earn The Nobel Prize In Medicine

ScienceDaily (May 9, 2008) — Gamers have devoted countless years of collective brainpower to rescuing princesses or protecting the planet against alien invasions. This week researchers at the University of Washington will try to harness those finely honed skills to make medical discoveries, perhaps even finding a cure for HIV.

A new game, named Foldit, turns protein folding into a competitive sport. Introductory levels teach the rules, which are the same laws of physics by which protein strands curl and twist into three-dimensional shapes -- key for biological mysteries ranging from Alzheimer's to vaccines.

After about 20 minutes of training, people feel like they're playing a video game but are actually mouse-clicking in the name of medical science. The free program is at http://fold.it/.

The game was developed by doctoral student Seth Cooper and postdoctoral researcher Adrien Treuille, both in computer science and engineering, working with Zoran Popovic, a UW associate professor of computer science and engineering; David Baker, a UW professor of biochemistry and Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator; and David Salesin, a UW professor of computer science and engineering. Professional game designers provided advice during the game's creation.

"We're hopefully going to change the way science is done, and who it's done by," said Popovic, who presented the project today at the Games for Health meeting in Baltimore. "Our ultimate goal is to have ordinary people play the game and eventually be candidates for winning the Nobel Prize."

Proteins, of which there are more than 100,000 different kinds in the human body, form every cell, make up the immune system and set the speed of chemical reactions. We know many proteins' genetic sequence, but don't know how they fold up into complex shapes whose nooks and crannies play crucial biological roles.

Computer simulators calculate all possible protein shapes, but this is a mathematical problem so huge that all the computers in the world would take centuries to solve it. In 2005, Baker developed a project named Rosetta@home that taps into volunteers' computer time all around the world. But even 200,000 volunteers aren't enough.

"There are too many possibilities for the computer to go through every possible one," Baker said. "An approach like Rosetta@home does well on small proteins, but as the protein gets bigger and bigger it gets harder and harder, and the computers often fail.

"People, using their intuition, might be able to home in on the right answer much more quickly."

Rosetta@home and Foldit both use the Rosetta protein-folding software. Foldit is the first protein-folding project that asks volunteers for something other than unused processor cycles on their computers or Playstation machines. Foldit also differs from recent human-computer interactive games that use humans' ability to recognize images or interpret text. Instead, Foldit capitalizes on people's natural 3-D problem-solving skills.

The intuitive skills that make someone good at playing Foldit are not necessarily the ones that make a top biologist. Baker says his 13-year-old son is faster at folding proteins than he is. Others may be even faster.

"I imagine that there's a 12-year-old in Indonesia who can see all this in their head," Baker says.

Eventually, the researchers hope to advance science by discovering protein-folding prodigies who have natural abilities to see proteins in 3-D.

"Some people are just able to look at the game and in less than two minutes, get to the top score," said Popovic. "They can't even explain what they're doing, but somehow they're able to do it."

The game looks like a 21st-century version of Tetris, with multicolored geometric snakes filling the screen. A team that includes a half-dozen UW graduate and undergraduate students spent more than a year figuring out how to make the game both accurate and engaging. They faced some special challenges that commercial game developers don't encounter.

"We don't know what the best result is, so we can't help people or hint people toward that goal," Popovic explained. The team also couldn't arbitrarily decide to make one move worth 1,000 bonus points, since the score corresponds to the energy needed to hold the protein in that shape.

Almost 1,000 players have tested the system in recent weeks, playing informal challenges using proteins with known shapes. Starting this week, however, the developers will open the game to the public and offer proteins of unknown shapes. Also starting this week, Foldit gamers will face off against research groups around the world in a major protein-structure competition held every two years.

Beginning in the fall, Foldit problems will expand to involve creating new proteins that we might wish existed -- enzymes that could break up toxic waste, for example, or that would absorb carbon dioxide from the air. Computers alone cannot design a protein from scratch. The game lets the computer help out when it's a simple optimization problem -- the same way that computer solitaire sometimes moves the cards to clean up the table -- letting the player concentrate on interesting moves.

Eventually, the researchers hope to present a medical nemesis, such as HIV or malaria, and challenge players to devise a protein with just the right shape to lock into the virus and deactivate it. Winning protein designs will be synthesized in Baker's lab and tested in petri dishes. High-scoring players will be credited in scientific publications the way that top Rosetta@home contributors already are credited for their computer time.

"Long-term, I'm hoping that we can get a significant fraction of the world's population engaged in solving critical problems in world health, and doing it collaboratively and successfully through the game," Baker said. "We're trying to use the brain power of people all around the world to advance biomedical research."

Foldit includes elements of multiplayer games in which people can team up, chat with other players and create online profiles. Over time the researchers will analyze people's moves to see how the top players solve puzzles. This information will be fed back into the game's design so the game's tools and format can evolve.

The research is funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Microsoft Corp. and Adobe Systems Inc., and through fellowships at Nvidia Corp. and Intel Corp.
Adapted from materials provided by University of Washington.


Basically, someone at UW wrote the framework for a game where the rules are actual rules of physics governing protein folding. The player is given a real protein and is supposed to figure out how it would fold. If you end up solving one, you could get a share of the Nobel (supposedly), which iirc is a cool million and everlasting fame in the nerd community. http://fold.it for the download (the site is slow to load, probably suffering from the slashdot/digg effect).

I think it's a pretty interesting idea, especially given that the only hurdle right now is computational time and the human brain is supposed to run some of the best pattern-recognition heuristics. But, honestly, how long would you play this game?
zdd
Profile Blog Joined October 2004
1463 Posts
Last Edited: 2008-05-10 18:27:51
May 10 2008 18:26 GMT
#2
I've played the game and I can say that it's pretty fun. It's like a puzzle game, basically you move around the protein parts, then shake the things and wiggle the backbone to get it to have a lower energy level (higher score) than before. Add to that the competitive aspect of it (scores are updated in real time on a scoreboard) and it becomes a really addicting game.
Right now they're only doing pre-solved proteins, but eventually they will put up the ones that scientists don't know the answer to, which would make you really help science by playing the game.
All you need in life is a strong will to succeed and unrelenting determination. If you meet these prerequisites, you can become anything you want with absolutely no luck, fortune or natural ability.
Last Romantic
Profile Blog Joined June 2006
United States20661 Posts
May 10 2008 18:32 GMT
#3
Let's make a Group. Team Liquid must win the internet [and cure cancer while we're at it]
ㅋㄲㅈㅁ
Luddite
Profile Blog Joined April 2007
United States2315 Posts
May 10 2008 18:33 GMT
#4
hahaha yeah right. Protein folding is by far the toughest problem in computational biophysics. A lot of really smart people with very powerful computer systems have been working on it for a long time. I really doubt that it's going to be solved by a bunch of kids messing around on an internet game.
Can't believe I'm still here playing this same game
EnDeR_
Profile Blog Joined May 2004
Spain2774 Posts
May 10 2008 18:39 GMT
#5
This is an awesome idea, I'm gonna try it out
estás más desubicao q un croissant en un plato de nécoras
nitram
Profile Blog Joined September 2004
Canada5412 Posts
May 10 2008 18:39 GMT
#6
Alright, im up for the challenge :p
These sites might be of more use than a StarCraft site, where the majority of posters look on WCIII as the dense misformed fetus produced during Blizzards latest miscarrige.
EmeraldSparks
Profile Blog Joined January 2008
United States1451 Posts
May 10 2008 18:40 GMT
#7
Just because it's really obnoxiously hard to do with a powerful computer system doesn't mean that humans can't do it better, which can really be clearly seen in fields like pattern recognition.
But why?
frozenclaw
Profile Blog Joined December 2006
Canada410 Posts
May 10 2008 18:41 GMT
#8
I'd actually try to contribute in the Team Liquid group if there ever was one.
xhuwin
Profile Blog Joined June 2007
United States476 Posts
May 10 2008 18:50 GMT
#9
Woah this is cool. I did protein architecture research last summer and it was pretty interesting. Thanks for sharing.
xyn
EnDeR_
Profile Blog Joined May 2004
Spain2774 Posts
May 10 2008 18:56 GMT
#10
Hmm, someone make the teamliquid group :D, I'll definitely join.
estás más desubicao q un croissant en un plato de nécoras
Luddite
Profile Blog Joined April 2007
United States2315 Posts
May 10 2008 18:56 GMT
#11
On May 11 2008 03:40 EmeraldSparks wrote:
Just because it's really obnoxiously hard to do with a powerful computer system doesn't mean that humans can't do it better, which can really be clearly seen in fields like pattern recognition.

uh humans have worked on it too. A lot. My professor described this problem to me this way.

Suppose that someone took a building and disassembled it, into just a big pile of wood, nails, and what not. Could you look at that pile of stuff and figure out what sort of building it made? Without even being allowed to experiment and build stuff with it? Probably not.
Can't believe I'm still here playing this same game
BlackStar
Profile Blog Joined July 2007
Netherlands3029 Posts
May 10 2008 18:58 GMT
#12
This is actually one of the most exiting distributed computing you can participate in. Being able to calculate how protein fold is huge. It's like the real 'language' of life.
Deleted User 3420
Profile Blog Joined May 2003
24492 Posts
Last Edited: 2008-05-10 19:04:45
May 10 2008 19:01 GMT
#13
looks like the site couldn't handle the digg traffic


I want to play this but I can't seem to find a site to dl it. I don't want to have to use a torrent they go insanely slow here.
Cogito
Profile Blog Joined January 2008
United States453 Posts
Last Edited: 2008-05-10 19:10:29
May 10 2008 19:07 GMT
#14
Thanks for the post. I like the idea of anything that gets the public interested in contemporary scientific problems. Reminds me of SETI@Home.

edit - Site is definitely under heavy traffic load right now, will try later.
Jathin
Profile Blog Joined February 2005
United States3505 Posts
May 10 2008 19:12 GMT
#15
--- Nuked ---
Deleted User 3420
Profile Blog Joined May 2003
24492 Posts
May 10 2008 19:19 GMT
#16
Well there are billions of people on earth, I am sure there is plenty of latent geniuses just waiting to get interested in this.
Mynock
Profile Joined September 2002
4492 Posts
May 10 2008 19:56 GMT
#17
Yeah, if there's one thing gamers can beat, it's cancer. I mean, how hard can it be? As hard as woodman? As hard as Airman? No way!
Famehunter
Profile Joined August 2007
Canada586 Posts
May 10 2008 20:00 GMT
#18
This just sounds like they want volunteers to do all the work for free and if a solution is found , they ll make shit tons of monney. Even if they give a portion of the credit to the "talented" people able to solve protein paterns.

So for them its a win, win equation.

If you have time to waste ,and love playing that puzzle game, then by all means help them but I doubt your contribution will hardly have any impact. Its like looking for jesus amongst the living, the chosen one who can solve protein paterns with his amazing brain. You might as well go give your blood and save the life of dozens of people with a single donation.
Velox Versutus vigilans
Puosu
Profile Blog Joined April 2007
6992 Posts
May 10 2008 20:00 GMT
#19
Just registered and installed it on my computer, will have a better look on it tomorrow as I have more time, sounds extremely interesting.
IntoTheWow
Profile Blog Joined May 2004
is awesome32277 Posts
May 10 2008 20:04 GMT
#20
On May 11 2008 03:32 Last Romantic wrote:
Let's make a Group. Team Liquid must win the internet [and cure cancer while we're at it]



hahha
Moderator<:3-/-<
Not_Computer
Profile Blog Joined January 2007
Canada2277 Posts
Last Edited: 2008-05-10 20:17:54
May 10 2008 20:16 GMT
#21
This calls for that guy (and all the others like him) who claim he has super IQ but he chooses not to do anything with it because he doesn't feel like it.
"Jaedong hyung better be ready. I'm going to order the most expensive dinner in Korea."
Navane
Profile Blog Joined February 2007
Netherlands2749 Posts
May 10 2008 20:17 GMT
#22
Wasnt there this bouncer with an IQ of 230 who had figured the whole world out? There was a thread on him, with some youtube movies. Someone contact him and send him this game.

ketomai
Profile Joined June 2007
United States2789 Posts
May 10 2008 20:26 GMT
#23
I agree that we should make a group =D.
zdd
Profile Blog Joined October 2004
1463 Posts
Last Edited: 2008-05-10 21:19:04
May 10 2008 21:18 GMT
#24
made a team called Teamliquid.net join if you like
http://fold.it/portal/node/188486
All you need in life is a strong will to succeed and unrelenting determination. If you meet these prerequisites, you can become anything you want with absolutely no luck, fortune or natural ability.
Infundibulum
Profile Blog Joined May 2003
United States2552 Posts
May 10 2008 22:18 GMT
#25
joined :D
LoL NA: MothLite == Steam: p0nd
b3h47pte
Profile Blog Joined May 2007
United States1317 Posts
May 10 2008 22:20 GMT
#26
On May 11 2008 03:32 Last Romantic wrote:
Let's make a Group. Team Liquid must win the internet [and cure cancer while we're at it]


News next year:
TL.net receives Nobel Prize
zizou21
Profile Joined September 2006
United States3683 Posts
May 10 2008 22:22 GMT
#27
trying to get it, the site is not loading
its me, tasteless,s roomate LOL!
evanthebouncy!
Profile Blog Joined June 2006
United States12796 Posts
May 11 2008 02:56 GMT
#28
On May 11 2008 03:32 Last Romantic wrote:
Let's make a Group. Team Liquid must win the internet [and cure cancer while we're at it]

GOgogo!!!
Life is run, it is dance, it is fast, passionate and BAM!, you dance and sing and booze while you can for now is the time and time is mine. Smile and laugh when still can for now is the time and soon you die!
evanthebouncy!
Profile Blog Joined June 2006
United States12796 Posts
May 11 2008 03:01 GMT
#29
Let's do ittt!!!
Calling all Flash game pwners and in general!!
TO ARMS xD
Life is run, it is dance, it is fast, passionate and BAM!, you dance and sing and booze while you can for now is the time and time is mine. Smile and laugh when still can for now is the time and soon you die!
thunk
Profile Blog Joined March 2008
United States6233 Posts
May 11 2008 03:02 GMT
#30
If they had flashy website, some way to televise this and large cash prizes, it might take off.
Every time Jung Myung Hoon builds a vulture, two probes die. || My post count was a palindrome and I was never posting again.
ketomai
Profile Joined June 2007
United States2789 Posts
May 11 2008 03:07 GMT
#31
hm..I can't log on, it keeps telling me I can't connect.
Jyvblamo
Profile Blog Joined June 2006
Canada13788 Posts
Last Edited: 2008-05-11 03:24:36
May 11 2008 03:16 GMT
#32
Great, I was looking for a new time-sink!
Edit: This looks way more interesting than that free-rice site.
Edit2: Man, their server is balls.
evanthebouncy!
Profile Blog Joined June 2006
United States12796 Posts
May 11 2008 04:18 GMT
#33
Bah I can't pass the last level
Life is run, it is dance, it is fast, passionate and BAM!, you dance and sing and booze while you can for now is the time and time is mine. Smile and laugh when still can for now is the time and soon you die!
fight_or_flight
Profile Blog Joined June 2007
United States3988 Posts
Last Edited: 2008-05-11 04:24:27
May 11 2008 04:23 GMT
#34
On May 11 2008 12:07 nevake wrote:
hm..I can't log on, it keeps telling me I can't connect.

me too :'(

I wish there was a secondary way to download new puzzles.
Do you really want chat rooms?
zdd
Profile Blog Joined October 2004
1463 Posts
May 11 2008 04:33 GMT
#35
On May 11 2008 13:18 evanthebouncy! wrote:
Bah I can't pass the last level

just line up all the things so that the hydrogen bonds show up between them (use right click to freeze things and then just drag them forcibly) then shake&wiggle. after that, make some rubber bands to the spirals from the hydrogen bonded things, and wiggle to move them closer, remove bands, shake&wiggle again, and it should be done
All you need in life is a strong will to succeed and unrelenting determination. If you meet these prerequisites, you can become anything you want with absolutely no luck, fortune or natural ability.
Infundibulum
Profile Blog Joined May 2003
United States2552 Posts
May 11 2008 04:55 GMT
#36
i'm having trouble hiding the hydrophobics :S
LoL NA: MothLite == Steam: p0nd
micronesia
Profile Blog Joined July 2006
United States24743 Posts
May 11 2008 05:03 GMT
#37
TSL season 3 will have a one million dollar prize pool ez.
ModeratorThere are animal crackers for people and there are people crackers for animals.
Goosey
Profile Blog Joined September 2005
United States695 Posts
May 11 2008 05:22 GMT
#38
On May 11 2008 05:00 Famehunter wrote:
This just sounds like they want volunteers to do all the work for free and if a solution is found , they ll make shit tons of monney. Even if they give a portion of the credit to the "talented" people able to solve protein paterns.

So for them its a win, win equation.


How cynical can you get before you just spontaneously explode in a fireball of distrust and negativity? This is a great project! Even if it doesn't lead to good results it still helps raise awareness and get people interested in what is otherwise an abstract and hard to understand topic.

"make shit tons of monney[sic]"?? Are you fucking out of your mind? No one goes after a Nobel prize for sake of making a profit. Want to take a look at the masterminds behind this one: http://depts.washington.edu/bakerpg/ and http://www.cs.washington.edu/ARL/

Yea, they sure look like they are rolling in the green from all the people they have scammed into science with their 'higher education'.
#1 Shuttle Fan.
Kau *
Profile Joined March 2007
Canada3500 Posts
May 11 2008 05:45 GMT
#39
Man the competition ones are hard and frustrating. Why won't all 4 line up and make hydrogen bonds ?
Moderator
Straylight
Profile Joined March 2008
Canada706 Posts
May 11 2008 09:28 GMT
#40
On May 11 2008 05:00 Famehunter wrote:
This just sounds like they want volunteers to do all the work for free and if a solution is found , they ll make shit tons of monney. Even if they give a portion of the credit to the "talented" people able to solve protein paterns.

So for them its a win, win equation.

If you have time to waste ,and love playing that puzzle game, then by all means help them but I doubt your contribution will hardly have any impact. Its like looking for jesus amongst the living, the chosen one who can solve protein paterns with his amazing brain. You might as well go give your blood and save the life of dozens of people with a single donation.


And why the fuck not? There are billions of people out there. If it is true that there is one person out there who can handle this, then why not? How about donating blood AND supporting this program.
It felt like gravity.
zdd
Profile Blog Joined October 2004
1463 Posts
May 22 2008 07:11 GMT
#41
Guys we made front page!

http://fold.it/portal/adobe_main

We were amazed by the scores you got on the four CASP practice puzzles (1-1, 2-1, 3-1, and 4-1). The top groups were There Will Be Cake, which won two of the four, L'Alliance Francophone and Teamliquid.net. The top players were anjen, Mike_AitkenDeakin, Bolby, and Zalrosee.
All you need in life is a strong will to succeed and unrelenting determination. If you meet these prerequisites, you can become anything you want with absolutely no luck, fortune or natural ability.
bladebrood
Profile Blog Joined April 2008
189 Posts
May 22 2008 07:57 GMT
#42
yea come on guys lets win the internetz
Mastermind
Profile Blog Joined April 2008
Canada7096 Posts
May 22 2008 08:15 GMT
#43
On May 11 2008 04:56 Mynock wrote:
Yeah, if there's one thing gamers can beat, it's cancer. I mean, how hard can it be? As hard as woodman? As hard as Airman? No way!

Greatest fucking quote ever.
FR4CT4L
Profile Blog Joined March 2008
Australia697 Posts
May 22 2008 09:57 GMT
#44
wow I figured someone would have knocked me off 4-1 transduction...go figure.

Zalrosee is my unverisal account name other than on TL since me and my buds decided to make some crazy gamer names. Just to clarify.
Veni, vidi, vici!
Fen
Profile Blog Joined June 2006
Australia1848 Posts
Last Edited: 2008-05-22 13:07:45
May 22 2008 12:09 GMT
#45
woah, awsome. Seeing as I do a bit of work at uni in protein conformations and stuff, this is exciting stuff. Downloading game now.
thoraxe
Profile Blog Joined March 2007
United States1449 Posts
May 22 2008 12:34 GMT
#46
Been there done that with my PS3 although I was Folding@home not foldit and the ps3 has more power.
Obama singing "Kick Ass" Song: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yghFBt-fXmw&feature=player_embedde
Chewits
Profile Joined September 2006
Northern Ireland1200 Posts
May 22 2008 13:15 GMT
#47
Downloading now. Joined TL team.
Whats the altitude?
JeeJee
Profile Blog Joined July 2003
Canada5652 Posts
May 22 2008 17:40 GMT
#48
hehe this is pretty fun
after i finished the beginning puzzles i tried casp 4-2 transduction and got ~100th with 10650pts. I'm not sure how much 'skill' is in this since my strat so far was simply to push everything together, get as many h-bonds as i can and then s+w to get a high score >_>
(\o/)  If you want it, you find a way. Otherwise you find excuses. No exceptions.
 /_\   aka Shinbi (requesting a name change since 27/05/09 ☺)
BaDayOri
Profile Blog Joined December 2007
Korea (South)469 Posts
May 22 2008 17:42 GMT
#49
genius
and no homo but you better show your boy respect, before the heck blow your head off like oral sex -CASSIDY
fight_or_flight
Profile Blog Joined June 2007
United States3988 Posts
May 22 2008 17:42 GMT
#50
Just so everyone knows, I tried to play this on my laptop but it kept crashing whenever I was trying to open a puzzle. I found out the problem was I needed to update my graphics card driver. Kind of strange since I got the laptop pretty recently.
Do you really want chat rooms?
LaLuSh
Profile Blog Joined April 2003
Sweden2358 Posts
May 22 2008 18:25 GMT
#51
Hey zalrosee. I reclaimed your (and teamliquids) #1 spot on 3-2 Practice CASP.

9260 points.
JeeJee
Profile Blog Joined July 2003
Canada5652 Posts
May 22 2008 18:27 GMT
#52
sigh gotta go to class
gonna work on 3-2 in it, its so.. twirly
i think im rank 150th atm.. not even close yet to top T_T
(\o/)  If you want it, you find a way. Otherwise you find excuses. No exceptions.
 /_\   aka Shinbi (requesting a name change since 27/05/09 ☺)
ulszz
Profile Blog Joined June 2007
Jamaica1787 Posts
May 22 2008 18:35 GMT
#53
nvr played this game...
everliving, everfaithful, eversure
Hot_Bid
Profile Blog Joined October 2003
Braavos36383 Posts
Last Edited: 2008-05-22 18:46:32
May 22 2008 18:46 GMT
#54
lol we made their leaderboard rofl

keep it up guys!!
@Hot_Bid on Twitter - ESPORTS life since 2010 - http://i.imgur.com/U2psw.png
8882
Profile Blog Joined December 2003
2718 Posts
May 22 2008 19:12 GMT
#55
what am I supposed to do in this game, the "helpful descriptions" in the top left corner are useless and do not help at all. Am I supposed to get as little or as much points as possible? In level 3 I had like 8100 but I couldnt pass despite the fact that the protein seemed solved, so it should be as much as possible?
I have returned
Klockan3
Profile Blog Joined July 2007
Sweden2866 Posts
May 22 2008 19:16 GMT
#56
This game is hard. But its great that they are finding a way to use free brainpower, this is a very good business model. The laws of folding proteins are simple, then actually figuring out how each actually does it is hard, thats why it doesn't matter if you got a phd or is just a 12 year old gamer.

Most problem are not like this, but in this case it is probably advantegous to just bring in the masses of people to help.
Infundibulum
Profile Blog Joined May 2003
United States2552 Posts
May 22 2008 23:12 GMT
#57
On May 23 2008 03:25 LaLuSh wrote:
Hey zalrosee. I reclaimed your (and teamliquids) #1 spot on 3-2 Practice CASP.

9260 points.


im working on that one now. i think it's supposed to be some kind of tube structure, with the sheets curved around?

im at #86 right now
LoL NA: MothLite == Steam: p0nd
bustaBust
Profile Blog Joined December 2006
Canada469 Posts
May 22 2008 23:36 GMT
#58
I just check it out, it's officially the most boring game I've ever seen.
ProTech_MediC
Profile Blog Joined October 2007
United States498 Posts
May 23 2008 00:11 GMT
#59
Joined the TL group and DL'ing the game
MC Fighting!~
SonuvBob
Profile Blog Joined October 2006
Aiur21550 Posts
May 23 2008 01:16 GMT
#60
Ow, headache.

Anyone beat 9019 on #56?
Administrator
Shauni
Profile Blog Joined July 2004
4077 Posts
May 23 2008 09:14 GMT
#61
This is pretty cool. I'm gonna try and win some internets too now.
I'm taking whatever coverage I can get, because frankly, I'm busy working on this million dollar deal at my job. Early retirement is a good thing brotha man. - MessengerASL
gravity
Profile Joined March 2004
Australia1988 Posts
May 23 2008 09:38 GMT
#62
I'm impressed by how well-designed the program is from a usability point of view.
Navane
Profile Blog Joined February 2007
Netherlands2749 Posts
Last Edited: 2008-07-30 21:02:42
July 30 2008 20:55 GMT
#63
bumpetiebump

I was looking for this one, and i thought; lets bump for the sake of humanity.

btw maybe someone could edit Foldit into the title and http://fold.it/portal/node/188486 (TL group) in the op.
EpiK
Profile Blog Joined January 2007
Korea (South)5757 Posts
July 30 2008 20:59 GMT
#64
go huskies!
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