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Grid Computing Planet : Features: Solving The World's Problems, One PC At A Time


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Solving The World's Problems, One PC At A Time
April 9, 2002
By Paul Shread

It seems like the ultimate fulfillment of the Internet's promise: millions of computers around the globe linked together to solve some of mankind's most perplexing problems.

Grid computing, the Internet and the ubiquitous PC have come together in scores of volunteer distributed computing projects that have sprung up around the globe. Some of the more famous are SETI@home, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, FightAIDS@Home, and the recent anthrax project, which in its first phase narrowed 3.57 billion molecules down to 300,000 with therapeutic potential in a stunning 24 days.

(A list of major grid-related projects can be found here.)

Grid computing technologies and the Internet enable the projects to scavenge idle CPU cycles off volunteers' machines to create a global supercomputer crunching billions of molecules or calculations that otherwise wouldn't be possible.

Most of the projects work via a software download that either runs in the background full-time, or as a screensaver when the computer is idle. Whole communities have sprung up around these projects, competing as individuals or teams for top rankings and bragging rights.

Looking for the Right Chemistry

After months of watching these online communities and their intense partisanship, I finally decided to join up. I chose United Devices, partly because they're the only Grid computing company focused primarily on a public exchange - in addition to enterprise - model, and partly because I wanted to contribute something to the massive cancer research project that UD is undertaking in conjunction with the University of Oxford's chemistry department and Intel.

It's the largest computational chemistry project ever undertaken, and it couldn't be done without the help of the project's 795,000 volunteers running more than 1.5 million Windows-based machines.

The project has identified 12 proteins with potential to fight cancer, and is screening 3.5 billion molecules to see how they interact with those proteins.

Through a "virtual screening" process, special analysis software identifies the molecules that interact with the proteins, and determines which of the molecular candidates has a high probability of being developed into a drug. The process is like searching for the right key to open a lock by trying billions of molecular keys. And doing it virtually, on computers, instead of one molecule at a time in a laboratory.

Participants in the project are sent a unit of molecules over the Internet. Their PCs analyze the molecules using drug-design software called THINK. The software analyzes the molecular data by creating a three-dimensional model and changing its shape or conformation to attempt to dock it into a protein site. When a conformation docks successfully and triggers an interaction with the protein, it registers a "hit." These hits are what the project hinges on; any one hit may be the one that will ultimately lead to a cure. All hits are recorded, ranked by strength, and filed for the next stage of the project.

My first day volunteering for the project, I scored 26 "hits," or molecules with therapeutic potential. Not a bad day's work.

A Cool Screen Saver

You can watch the molecules that your computer is crunching on the nifty screen saver, or on the UD agent's visual interface if you're running the software full-time. I tried both screensaver and background operation, and noticed some sluggishness while running the software in the background while I worked. I should add that I'm a fairly heavy PC user, with a dozen or more windows or programs open at any given time, so lighter users might not notice any drag on performance from full-time use. So I opted for the screen saver, since every little bit helps, and in this age of shrinking IT budgets, donating your spare CPU cycles is an easy way to contribute to scientific and medical discovery.

You don't have to worry about interrupting the program if you need to work or shut down your machine. UD spokesman Andy Prince said the project checkpoints after each molecule. Since each work unit contains dozens if not hundreds of molecules, and each one is screened fairly quickly, the effect of any interruption is minimal, and the program picks up where it left off when it starts up again.

UD and its partners take security and privacy seriously, pledging state of the art controls and precautions.

The results from the project are delivered to the University of Oxford and the National Foundation for Cancer Research, both non-profit organizations, for additional study. The University of Oxford will own the intellectual property associated with any discovery they find, and the resulting data will be made available to the public, at no cost, sometime after the initial research is completed.

More than five decades of cancer research have yielded more than 40 drugs for the treatment of cancers, according to the Oxford Web site. With biotechnology opening the entire human genome to exploration, and Grid computing enabling the virtual screening of billions of molecules, the hope is great that that pace of discovery will quicken.

Thanks to the Internet, individual PC users can play a role in that discovery. And get a pretty cool screensaver in the process.

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