Path: utzoo!utgpu!watserv1!watmath!att!pacbell.com!ucsd!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!yale!cmcl2!phri!news From: roy@alanine.phri.nyu.edu (Roy Smith) Newsgroups: bionet.software Subject: FASTA speed Message-ID: <1991Jan25.174726.11329@phri.nyu.edu> Date: 25 Jan 91 17:47:26 GMT Sender: news@phri.nyu.edu (News System) Organization: Public Health Research Institute, New York City Lines: 19 I've often seen comments on these newsgroups, like the one from rak@sun1.ruf.uni-freiburg.de (Bodo Rak) today, to the effect that they can run FASTA against the whole GenBank database on a PC in 20 minutes. Frankly, these numbers astound me; I didn't think PCs were anywhere near that fast. This brings up the question, however, of what kind of PC are we talking about? I'm used to things like 10 Mhz 286 machines (I do all my real work on Suns and Macs and just use PC's to control bits of lab equipment and act as bootservers for bits of network gear). Should I expect to get search times like that on those sorts of machines, or at the people who claim these speeds using 30-MHz 386's with multi-Mbytes of RAM; an entirely different sort of beast? -- Roy Smith, Public Health Research Institute 455 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016 roy@alanine.phri.nyu.edu -OR- {att,cmcl2,rutgers,hombre}!phri!roy "Arcane? Did you say arcane? It wouldn't be Unix if it wasn't arcane!"