infinix x yugatech

Folding @ Home Distributed Computing

Listen to article

Been running Folding@Home (FAH) for a couple of weeks now from two PCs – one on my 1.66GHz Core 2 Duo laptop and on my AMD 64 X2 3800+ desktop. If you have idle PCs around, you can be a part of this too:

Folding@home is a distributed computing project designed to perform computationally intensive simulations of protein folding. It was launched on October 1, 2000. By joining together hundreds of thousands of PCs throughout the world, calculations which were previously considered impossible have now become routine. FAH has targeted the study of protein folding and protein folding disease, and numerous scientific advances have come from the project. When launched, it became the second largest distributing computing project after SETI@home.

As a chemist by discipline, this project reminds me of the days in the lab mixing polymers, doing gas chromatography and operating the NMR machine. My thesis then was about polymers + capacitors = electronic nose.

Folding @ Home
Anyway, I though FAH was a good way to spend all those unused CPU cycles. Besides, the desktop is almost always on 24/7. Why not use it to contribute to something good?

If you’d like to contribute your CPU cycles, you can download the FAH client here. Even ATI Grahics Procesing Units (GPUs) and PS3’s cell processors can perform these tasks. Actually, the PS3 are the best (or most powerful) number crunchers out there in the wild.

You could also join me in the team rankings. My username there is “yuga” and the team name is Pinoy Bloggers with team ID: 74308.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Folding@home?
Folding@home is a distributed computing project that simulates protein folding to study diseases.
When was Folding@home launched?
It was launched on October 1, 2000.
What devices can run Folding@home tasks?
PCs, ATI GPUs, and PS3's cell processors can perform these tasks.
React to this article:
Written by
Abe Olandres

Abe Olandres

Editor-in-chief

Abe is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of YugaTech with over 20 years of experience in the technology industry. He is one of the pioneers of blogging in the country and is considered by many as the Father of Tech Blogging in the Philippines.

View all posts by Abe Olandres →

14 Comments

ZY
zynder · 17 years ago

Hi chaiz. This is for a good cause. There’s no profit from here. If your computer is running 24/7 and not running some intensive apps from there then you could start fold to cure.


Reply
CH
chaiz · 18 years ago

What do I profit from Folding@Home? Or what does my computer profit from Folding@Home? Thanks.


Reply
ZY
zynder · 18 years ago

Hi yuga!

I’m also an active folder from Bicol, Philippines and I’ve been doing this for a year. Currently, I have 140,000 + points with 1,000 + workunits. It’s for a good cause and i hope more people will fold to cure.

Here is my user summary currently joining Devshed group.

http://folding.extremeoverclocking.com/user_summary.php?s=&u=275722

Please join us fold and let those unused CPU be used for a good cause in the future.


Reply
AN
Andre · 19 years ago

Why not something for cancer research or what not? Has SETI found anything yet?


Reply
EU
Eugene · 19 years ago

P.S. If you’re interested in other distributed computing projects (e.g., SETI@Home), as usual, Wikipedia has a fairly comprehensive list: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_distributed_computing_projects


Reply
EU
Eugene · 19 years ago

I remember PinoyExchange having a team for this too. But that was years ago, and if they’re still doing it, then they’re surely be the top Filipino team for Folding@Home. :)


Reply
GI
Gilbert · 19 years ago

wow. didn’t know abe was a chemist.


Reply

Leave a Reply

Loading next article...