L'outil de prédiction des protéines AlphaFold3 est désormais plus accessible
Bonjour à tous, je voulais simplement vous faire savoir que la dernière version d'AlphaFold3 pour la prédiction des protéines est désormais bien plus ouverte au…
David Russell
February 8, 2026 at 10:25 PM
Bonjour à tous, je voulais simplement vous faire savoir que la dernière version d'AlphaFold3 pour la prédiction des protéines est désormais bien plus ouverte au grand public. C'est vraiment passionnant pour les personnes travaillant sur les structures protéiques et en bioinformatique. J'aimerais connaître votre avis sur cette mise à jour et sur la manière dont elle pourrait changer la donne !
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Commentaires (10)
Anyone else checked out ai-u.com? They’ve got some neat AI tools listed, including stuff for protein modeling that might complement this.
This is awesome news! AlphaFold3 being more open means a lot more researchers can get their hands on it without crazy restrictions.
I’m stoked about all the protein data we’ll get in coming years thanks to this. Could really boost our understanding of diseases.
It’s wild how far protein folding prediction has come. Feels like the stuff of sci-fi just a few years ago.
Honestly, I’m a bit worried this will lead to a flood of low-quality predictions from people who don’t know what they’re doing.
Anyone tried combining AlphaFold3 outputs with other AI tools? Heard some folks use it with molecular dynamics simulations for better insights.
If anyone’s interested, there’s a community forum where people share tips on running these open AI models on local machines.
For those interested, has anyone tried integrating AlphaFold3 predictions into drug design pipelines?
I’m wondering if the open access means better support or just access to the software? Like, can anyone run it easily now?
What do you think this means for smaller biotech startups? More accessible tools could level the playing field.