Stanford University wrote:Our goal: to understand protein folding, misfolding, and related diseases
What is protein folding and how is folding linked to disease? Proteins are biology's workhorses -- its "nanomachines." Before proteins can carry out these important functions, they assemble themselves, or "fold." The process of protein folding, while critical and fundamental to virtually all of biology, in many ways remains a mystery.
Moreover, when proteins do not fold correctly (i.e. "misfold"), there can be serious consequences, including many well known diseases, such as Alzheimer's, Mad Cow (BSE), CJD, ALS, Huntington's, Parkinson's disease, and many Cancers and cancer-related syndromes.
You can help by simply running a piece of software. Folding@Home is a distributed computing project -- people from through out the world download and run software to band together to make one of the largest supercomputers in the world. Every computer makes the project closer to our goals.
Folding@Home uses novel computational methods coupled to distributed computing, to simulate problems thousands to millions of times more challenging than previously achieved.
Not sure how many of you guys like science besides Arlos but I think this project is really cool. This just came available for my PS3. From what I understand, I'm helping them by just running this and leaving my ps3 on and I'd be helping them even more if I got a team of people to join my "Folding team". If we leave our systems on, there's a simulation of a protein folding that just keeps running so that Stanford's Medical Center can analyze my data and possibly know more about some of today's diseases.