Sony To Expand Commercial Uses of PS3 68
Sony is considering proposals from commercial distributed computing concerns, mulling over rolling out more Folding@Home-like clients to their PlayStation 3 consoles. Gamasutra reports on a Financial Times article, discussing the future of the system. Because they would be commercial and not charitable organizations, the company is considering some form of compensation for users who would participate. "Sony Computer Entertainment CTO Masa Chatani indicated in an interview that Sony had already received numerous inquiries. 'A start-up or a pharmaceutical company that lacks a super-computer could utilize this kind of infrastructure. We are discussing various options with companies and exploring commercial applications', he said."
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A way to pay for online purchases? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A way to pay for online purchases? (Score:5, Informative)
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* And for those complaining about burning oil, I want to point out that I get all my electricity from wind power. So the more money I spend on electricity, the more I support alternative energy.
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Free games! (Score:2)
Better yet...free console. $600 is a bit steep.
Hmm...I wonder if someone could make it work that you could get a free console that would only work so long as it was able to process and transmit work units for a commercial application.
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If I left the PS3 on overnight (say 10 hours a day), that would still cost me about $10-12/month in electricity alone (I live in California) The compensation from Sony had better be worth in excess of that, otherwise, Sony is making money from me.
Now then, what's this got to do with games? $600 is an awfully big investment to make up-front for just a few bucks a month profit...
Compensation? (Score:1)
Well, duh. If someone's making money at my expense (bandwidth costs, electricity, wear on components...), as negligible as those expenses might be, I'd want to see some sort of return.
If Sony really wants to push it though, they'll just include the functionality in a firmware update and claim that the money's going to subsidi
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I'll give them a free idea... (Score:2)
make a $199.00 disc you insert in the cheapie ps3 and can upload content via the ethernet and you have a winner that will overtake the resto f the big names in digital signage overnight.
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AppleTV, same price, also HD, also $299.
These are 'consumer' units, which probably explains the difference in price from commercial 'digital signage' products. But, with the proper media server either could replicate the functionality.
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thanks!
hmm .. just thought of a neat idea for this (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, if Playstation 3 isn't charging for online access, then maybe it can be used to earn credits to purchasing stuff.
And for the Nintendo camp, how about earning those Wii points with contributing cycles! That'd be awesome!
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you're probably right, but, the example was to illustrate the reward
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ha! (Score:3, Insightful)
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The hard-coded floating point unit is single-precision indeed, and doesn't implement the full IEEE floating point spec, which raises eyebrows in the scientific double-precision junky crowd. The individual registers are 128-bit, although they are or
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Cost to run. (Score:5, Informative)
I would guess you could wear out a PS3 in a year by running it 24/7 on this, so that's $600/yr cost right there. I seriously doubt they plan to pay that much.
Even assuming the console would last forever, the electricity to run constantly it is apparently about $150/yr. http://ps3.ign.com/articles/776/776347p1.html [ign.com] This charts says the national average to run Folding@PS3 is $12.23/month, which is about $150/yr.
I don't think that they would even pay the $150 in straight cost you incur, let alone for the wear and tear on the console.
This is a great opportunity to contribute to a cause, but it's an awful idea as a way to make money in your home.
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Other than a fan. Running that at full speed 24/7 is sure to wear it right out.
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Also, I have a computer with a fan that conked out after 1 day. Anecdote cancellation in effect.
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In my couple of dozen or so machines I've had arou
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Only the moving parts (ie, CPU fan) should wear out appreciably more quickly due to sustained load. The silicon traces aren't going to degrade very much no matter how many electrons you push along them.
The Slashdot Automobile Analogy proves inadequate once again.
guarantee my $600 machine for life (Score:3, Interesting)
if Sony is going to actually ask me leave on my ridiculously power hungry "super-computer" while i'm not playing Socom4, they better at least agree to eat the cost and replace my machine if it fails. not fix, REPLACE. otherwise, why would i want to help "Joe's Rx" use my PS3, broadband connection, and precious power? to make some drug that they're going to charge, if not over-charge, me for when they release it?
This is a sorry attempt and positive PR. Sony, how about you concentrate on making some games for your VIDEO GAME SYSTEM!!!
Evidently, *you* didn't RTFA, stupid. (Score:2)
Oh.... they didn't? Looks like he wasn't the one who was a "stupid son of a bitch" around here then.
Tie it into a hot game (Score:1, Interesting)
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Because the PS3 is kicking so little ass compared to Sony's expectations they have a glut and are now looking for unusual ways to reduce stocks
The Missing ??? (Score:2)
[1]Since they're selling them at a loss I can't quite justify putting "profit" here. Yet.
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Many uses (Score:2)
And I hear you can play games on the thing too! Seriously, if Sony wants to market it as a cheap 'supercomputer' they need to offer another form factor. Perhaps a rack-mounted version pre-configured with Linux clustering.
Translation (Score:2)
We got this mountain of PS3s that aren't selling to save our lives, and if someone in management notices, me might get fired from our cushy jobs. It is now time to blow them out the door somehow or set the warehouse on fire.
-Charlie