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250,000 PS3s Folding@Home

GamesIndustry.biz reports that over 250,000 users have signed up for the Folding@Home project on the PlayStation 3. The sheer number of users has resulted in '700 teraflops in a single moment', most of which is provided by PS3 users. "'The PS3 turnout has been amazing, greatly exceeding our expectations and allowing us to push our work dramatically forward,' said Vijay Pande, associate professor of Chemistry at Stanford University and Folding@home program lead. 'Thanks to PS3, we have performed simulations in the first few weeks that would normally take us more than a year to calculate. We are now gearing up for new simulations that will continue our current studies of Alzheimer's and other diseases.'" The article notes the software has a new update with some refined functionality and faster processing.

11 of 111 comments (clear)

  1. Of course they're folding... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Of course the PS3s are spending the time doing Folding@Home.

    It's not like there's any games to play on them.

  2. Difficult by rlp · · Score: 4, Funny

    Tried it but couldn't get past the first boss level.

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    1. Re:Difficult by MeanderingMind · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's raining in Shanghai...

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  3. A small disparity by heinousjay · · Score: 5, Insightful

    According to the folding@home OS stats page, a total of 99712 PS3s contributed as of 25 Apr 2007. Where did the 250,000 come from?

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  4. Re:250,000? by TB · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They did say "Signed Up".

  5. Re:What is going to happen...? by shoptroll · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A similar question is how long until PS3 owners lose interest in this? F@H has been around a lot longer than the PS3. I've been running it on my PCs for a couple years now off and on, but are gamers going to keep leaving their machines on at night once the novelty and "my machine is helping cure cancer, how about yours?" wears off?

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  6. Folding@home by mypalmike · · Score: 4, Funny

    Best laundry sim on the market.

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  7. Better idea for PS3 idle time... by Xest · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's called turning it off, and helping do your little bit to cut CO2 emissions and cutting your electricity bill at the same time!

    Doesn't Sony know? Curing cancer is so last century, this century it's all about carbon emissions.

  8. Re:This is not "free" by DrEldarion · · Score: 4, Informative

    The PS3 barely puts out any heat when folding. I was surprised when I checked it in the morning and it was completely cool and not blowing out much heat. For perspective, when playing a game, the hot air coming out feels like my car's exhaust. The actual system stays pretty cool, though, which is a tribute to their cooling methods.

  9. Re:This is not "free" by ivan256 · · Score: 4, Informative

    It shouldn't be too surprising that the GPU would be the most energy hungry component... That's how it is in PCs too.

  10. Re:Requested feature by SydShamino · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A $180 check to the Alzheimer's foundation would be $15 a month to cure Alzheimer's, and it has the further benefits of:

    A) letting the foundation pay for whatever research it feels is most important, which might include the folding@home project but might not (or, if you specify with your donation, could possibly go to the project of your choice);

    B) does not necessarily consume electricity at residential rates using many, many distributed lossy AC->DC conversions, which for most people means additional cost cooling one's house in the summer and an overall increase in greenhouse gas emissions;

    C) would be tax deductible, so depending on your tax bracket you could donate $200-$225 to this cause, reducing the amount of money you give the government to pay for whatever it wants, but further increasing the amount of money going to research you want.

    Alzheimer's runs in my family, and keeping a computer running at my home all day is a stupid way to cure it. The only possible benefit is that it hides the cost in the electric bill instead of making people write out a check. That would be silly but harmless if that electricity wasn't polluting the atmosphere.

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