SteveWillis wrote:I guess what has me most upset about these is just how many of them I'm getting. Most of the time I'm working on at least one, sometimes two of these. I was looking at the project list and since there are so many projects, if assigned randomly, I shouldn't get but a couple a month. However they had among the highest number of atoms being studied. So I'm guessing that since I have pretty fast cards that the algorithm is intentionally matching them with me.
The project list might be long, but there's probably significantly fewer projects with sufficient remaining WUs and high enough assignment priority available for your mix of hardware and OS.
Right now, my ppd across 7 GTX 1080:
530k PPD (p9209)
730k PPD (p9206)
850k PPD (p13500)
850k PPD (p11400)
680k PPD (p10496)
500k PPD (p9212)
900k PPD (p11707)
Quite a spread! On 'average' I trust the PPD to even out, but I agree, it's frustrating to have multiple 'slow' WUs and seeing a million less PPD. It's compounded by not only are the 'slow' workunits worth fewer points, but they run for longer (a 50% mix of fast WUs earning 1M PPD and 50% slow earning 500k PPD doesn't average at 750k, but rather 670k). Short of Stanford rerunning a more rigorous benchmarking process or modifying the QRB, I don't see much changing unfortunately.