250,000 PS3s Folding@Home 111
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.
$500+ .... (Score:3, Insightful)
250,000+ with nothing better to do? (Score:4, Funny)
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I've had my Euro PS3 over a month, and not been bored by any of the launch titles. I am on the Nottingham missions on Offline Resistance:FOM, and I enjoy the online play, considerably more than any of the 360 FPS games I have played to date (I used to own a 360, before It went wrong). Motorstorm is also very enjoyable. When I don't play these, I have Gran Turisno HD, which only has a si
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Motorstorm? Boring as hell. Resistance: FOM? Call of Duty with aliens instead of Nazis, it could have just been released as an expansion pack. I'm not interested in Yet Another Crappy FPS/3PS, thank you.
Fl0w... good for about 30 minutes. Then it gets boring.
The only game I remotely enjoy on my PS3 is Lemmings. Other than that, it plays PS2 games. I could have stayed with a PS2 for that.
Congrats on being a Sony Fanboi Loser, now come back when they have some real games to offer
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Yeah, maybe they got some free publicity from making it possible to join Folding@home, but do you honestly believe that that's a negative thing?
I think it's amazing that they've actually leveraged that amount of computing power into a project that so sorely needed a boost. I think it's amazing that they F@h people now have to up their ante to keep up.
Hell, Sony could probably get a little more Goodwill-publicity squeezed out of the thing if they gave some k
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People will use the information gained by folding@home to make billions of dollars. The idea that this is some sort of charity is a sham. This is scientific research that will eventually be patented, hoarded, and sold back to you at tremendous profit. You could at least get your expenses paid for.
I'll be glad to buy it. (Score:1)
Re:$500+ .... (Score:4, Insightful)
Um... from the FAQ [stanford.edu]:
Who "owns" the results? What will happen to them? Unlike other distributed computing projects, Folding@home is run by an academic institution (specifically the Pande Group, at Stanford University's Chemistry Department), which is a nonprofit institution dedicated to science research and education. We will not sell the data or make any money off of it.
Moreover, we will make the data available for others to use. In particular, the results from Folding@home will be made available on several levels. Most importantly, analysis of the simulations will be submitted to scientific journals for publication, and these journal articles will be posted on the web page after publication. Next, after publication of these scientific articles which analyze the data, the raw data of the folding runs will be available for everyone, including other researchers, here on this web site.
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Only if the project doesn't work.
"Hey sonny, do you know that in my day our game machines did...um...I like soup!"
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Yes, the new drugs/treatments are still going to be expensive, but this sort of project isn't just about the cost of these things, it's also about the time it takes to develop them.
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These companies are thinking: Ok, if we've done all the hard work already, we may as well sell them for whatever we can get in Canada and Europe. If you think of it as one complete system, those who pay more are subsidizing the rest. Basically, other countries are leaching off of the U.S.'s highly efficient drug market. We'll see for how long that works for them.
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The number quoted in my previous post was including the costs for all the drugs that don't make it to market. When you buy an expensive drug you aren't just
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Why bother linking to the article? (Score:3, Informative)
Why not just put the entire article in the summary?
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That's great and all... (Score:2, Interesting)
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And of course, in traditional Slashdot fashi
Of course they're folding... (Score:4, Funny)
It's not like there's any games to play on them.
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This is Sony we're talking about -- God of War was not made by a third party, and Insomniac is working on another Ratchet & Clank, not to mention the existing games. I'm hoping Sony works out offering decent music & movie sales soon, but there's no reason to malig
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I think the PS3 is a fine console. It's the first Sony console I've owned and I haven't been disappointed one bit. It's really nice; it's too bad some folks can't see beyond their own ignorance. (I guess that's the definition of ignorance..)
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(...On the other hand, my ps3 has spent a lot more time playing movie trailers in hd than playing video games, so the grandparent isn't too far off the mark.)
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I just hope that positive results come out of their research. However, I do agree that this will be a problem when many research groups want you to donate processin
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Difficult (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Difficult (Score:5, Funny)
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(Oh come on, this is the perfect comment
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What is going to happen...? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:What is going to happen...? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Well it's nothing final, but there is talk of it, and it seems to be a logical step.
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As for electricity cost?
Let's say upper range: 217W * 8h = 1.6kW/h
Heck, let's go max. 380W * 8h = 3.4kW/h (Note: Completely unrealistic. Assumes 100% efficiency)
Average price of electricity is 10 cents or so. You're paying between 16
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Uh. Yeah. For people who can add at least. I posted this on
The PS3 is reported to run 220W when running folding@home.
In, for example, New York, the average residential cost of power in 2006 was 16.86 cents: (http://www.ppinys.org/reports/jtf/electricprices. html)
So 220W or 0.22kW x
That kind of money would buy you quite a few new games o
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A small disparity (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:A small disparity (Score:4, Funny)
Re:A small disparity (Score:4, Funny)
Sony's marketing department.
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My brother's PS3 is one of those (Score:2)
Sony or whoever's responsible really needs to find a way to get that app running while playing games or at least watching movies; I don't think most people will get any use out of it otherwise.
Rob
250,000? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:250,000? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Cores.... (Score:1)
This Folding@Home sounds like a fun game! (Score:2, Funny)
LOL all those M$ fanboys dont even know about this HOT ESCLUSIVE TITAL!
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By the way, if a folding PS3 is consuming 200 W and you would otherwise have it off when not playing, then for 23x7 folding, it would use about 1700 kW-hours of electricity per year ($150+). Not free
Re:This is not "free" (Score:5, Informative)
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Folding@home (Score:5, Funny)
Requested feature (Score:2)
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Considering the fact that running it 24/7 uses 144 kWh per month (200 W x 24 hrs x 30 day) I'd be pretty wary myself.
Even at a generous 10 cents/kWh (the US national avg), that's almost $15/month.
If you are unfortunate enough to live where electricity is much higher than that, you are closer to $25
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Second, $15-$25 a month is nothing (especially considering you were able to afford a PS3, and probably some games for it, and maybe even an HDTV and some Blu-ray discs...). Plenty of things cost $15 a month, MMO's, credit protection scams, insurance....and none of those things are cur
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Re:Requested feature (Score:5, Insightful)
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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The problem is that there is a high correlation between people who don't bother to switch to clean energy, and those who won't bother to write out a check. There are
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Better idea for PS3 idle time... (Score:5, Insightful)
Doesn't Sony know? Curing cancer is so last century, this century it's all about carbon emissions.
Re:Better idea for PS3 idle time... (Score:4, Informative)
And with any luck, we can do as well at cutting CO2 emissions as we did at curing cancer!
Simple solution, really (Score:2)
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Wha.... (Score:2, Funny)
power hungry? (Score:1)
good on them (Score:2, Insightful)
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