PS3 Owners To Simulate Gene Folding
Posted by
Zonk
on Thu Mar 15, 2007 12:20 PM
from the so-far-we-have-not-found-the-science dept.
from the so-far-we-have-not-found-the-science dept.
fistfullast33l writes "According to IGN UK, the next version of Playstation firmware will include a joint venture from Stanford University and Sony called Folding@Home. Similar to the infamous SETI@Home project, Folding@Home will be an idle application that participates in a simulation that 'aims to map the way that genes change shape (or fold), so they can be studied by scientists and, potentially, cure illnesses such as Parkinson's or a variety of cancers.' The application will download a 'work unit' that it will unravel to completion, update Stanford's servers, and then download the next unit and continue." We've previously discussed the client; it will be available as an update at the end of the month, and should appear on your cross-media bar once installed.
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Science: PS3 Client for Folding@Home Debuts, ATI GPU Version Soon 177 comments
eliot1785 writes "Stanford's Folding@Home project is reporting that Sony debuted a Folding@Home client for the PlayStation 3 today in Germany. Researchers hope to use the power of the PS3's Cell processor to greatly expand the number of FLOPS of which their network is capable. F@H also announced today that they will release a client capable of running on ATI graphics processors. With these two new developments, F@H hopes to raise the total power of their distributed computing network to 1-10 petaflops. At the upper end of that target, the network would be faster than any current supercomputer, at least in terms of FLOPS."
Reader TommyBear points out a collection of papers showing scientific advances made by the F@H researchers.
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Who? (Score:5, Funny)
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Who do you think will be hosting the next DDR game?
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Tis a shame... (Score:2, Interesting)
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Yes... but he'll have won. No corporation is going to get his spare change!
This is exactly what is wrong with our country today. We are so afraid of someone else winning tha
Re:Tis a shame... (Score:4, Interesting)
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I pay the energy bill for cycles used to crunch genetic mapping data that will be used by corporations to develop drugs for lifelong treatment (like they'd develop a cure when they could profit more from treatment?) so that when I'm sick, I can pay a few
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That is a load of crap, ever hear of a heatpump?
Yep. Ever heard of the cost of it sompared to a basic electrical oven? Unless you actually already have a heatpump installed it doesn't make sense to compare the heat from any electrical appliance to the o
Hmm... Folding@Home has been around forever (Score:5, Informative)
Also, here's the info on the Folding@Home website:
http://folding.stanford.edu/FAQ-PS3.html [stanford.edu]
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Hmm... Sony pretending that something that's been around forever is something new and exciting because it involves the PS3? Surely you jest!
(Sorry, sorry, I know, cheap shot. I just couldn't resist.)
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Definitely makes me think more kindly of Sony...It's obviously a PR scam, but I really don't care...They could have done a lot of
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Make money this way? (Score:4, Funny)
So, if there were a way to convert electricity into roughly its monetary value, I could put it in a money market account for (on average) 95 days, and then keep the interest that accrued. (5% per year at today's money market rates)
So, anyone know if you can charge enough for PS3 computing cycles for this to be worth it?
Unleash the power... (Score:3, Funny)
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Infamous? (Score:1)
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We both know they mean famous, but nobody really cares about the difference anymore. Serial killers are hugely popular, because people not only dont k
Re:Infamous? (Score:4, Funny)
Might even be the biggest thing to come out of Mexico.
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Genes don't fold..... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Genes don't fold..... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Genes don't fold..... (Score:5, Funny)
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Rock breaks through paper.
Chromatin (Score:2)
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Cost? (Score:2)
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Yeah, it somehow doesn
SETI, infamous? (Score:2)
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They haven't found any aliens.
I think your other statements are spot on, but there it is.
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None.
While there was tremendous success in the technical aspects of the pr
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Re:SETI, infamous? Let's fold proteins! (Score:1)
When you participate in gene-folding, or protein-folding (as in the Baker Labs at the University of Washington [washington.edu], which win year after year in best predictions), you know that it's going to useful research tha
So far I have not found the science... (Score:2)
...but the numbers keep on circling me [lyricsdepot.com].
Just a little help for those who were wondering what the department's name was all about.
Why in a firmware update? (Score:3, Interesting)
I can understand (and have commented before on the need for) a firmware update to add 'applications' or some such option to the XMB for non-game software, but I can't see that the software itself should require this distribution method.
Anyone able to shed light on this?
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Games? (Score:2, Funny)
Really, really. It's the games. Home might be nifty (although also microtransactiony) and this might be a good idea, but neither of these are going
Infamy != Fame (& infamy != ( ! fame)) (Score:1)
These isn't even a malapropism because you didn't use it to mean "not famous" as most do. Why don't people proofread a single paragraph that goes to millions? (I'll neve
Fi nally (Score:1)
I kid I kid
Eh (Score:2)
Is this thing off by default? (Score:2)
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bad (Score:2)
Expensive (Score:2)
Next-generation graphics! (Score:2)
Alright, we have phong shading, but at least some specular bloom [stanford.edu]. Folding@home are taking their first steps into next-generation graphics [vgcats.com]!