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folding@home

gaming science

Foldit Makes Protein Folding A Game

Could you win a Nobel Prize in Medicine for playing a computer game? Foldit is a game for the PC and Mac that takes the Folding@Home concept and adds a more human element to the mix. Instead of having a network of computers work through all of the possible shapes for folding proteins, a problem so huge it could take centuries for all of the computers in the world to solve, Foldit presents unfolded proteins to the player in the form of puzzles, on the basis that human intuition could tackle the problem much faster.

"Some people are just able to look at the game and in less than two minutes, get to the top score," said (UW associate professor of computer science and engineering) Zoran Popovic. "They can't even explain what they're doing, but somehow they're able to do it."
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good corporate citizen

PS3 Folding@Home Hits 1M Users

SCEA's Playstation 3 Folding@home project, which went live back on March 22, recently topped one million user, meaning that about 3,000 PS3 users have registered for Folding@home a day since the software went live on the console.

"Since partnering with SCEI, we have seen our research capabilities increase by leaps and bounds through the continued participation of Folding@home users," said Vijay Pande, Associate Professor of Chemistry at Stanford University and Folding@home project lead. "Now we have over one million PS3 users registered for Folding@home, allowing us to address questions previously considered impossible to tackle computationally, with the goal of finding cures to some of the world's most life-threatening diseases. We are grateful for the extraordinary worldwide participation by PS3 and PC users around the globe."

Thanks to all of those PS3 owners willing to tie their console to the network, and pay the resulting electric bill, PS3 users make up about 74 percent of the total teraflop computing power of the Folding@home project.

Well done Sony, well done. Oh, speaking of well done, Team Kotaku is currently ranked number 106 at folding@home. If you haven't signed up (for Folding@home) and own a PS3, you really should.

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research

PS3 Pushes Folding@Home to World Record

Stanford University's Folding@home program is going to be recognized by the Guinness World Records folks as the most powerful distributed computer network in the world, thanks, in part, to the Playstation 3.

"To have Folding@home recognized by Guinness World Records as the most powerful distributed computing network ever is a reflection of the extraordinary worldwide participation by gamers and consumers around the world and for that we are very grateful," said Vijay Pande, Associate Professor of Chemistry at Stanford University and Folding@home project lead. "Without them we would not be able to make the advancements we have made in our studies of several different diseases. But it is clear that none of this would be even remotely possible without the power of PS3, it has increased our research capabilities by leaps and bounds."

On September 23, the more than 670,000 PS3 users participating in Folding@home hit the petaflop mark. Grats, Stanford, Sony and gamers, hit the jump for the press release.

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ps3

Folding@Home Achieves Petaflop

As mentioned by Kaz in his TGS keynote, the power of the PS3 has carried the Folding@home project to a milestone never before reached on a distributed computing network - the petaflop...one quadrillion floating point operations per second. It would take everyone in the world doing 75,000 calculations in a second to achieve similar results, so the milestone is pretty massive.
"The recent inclusion of PS3 as part of the Folding@home program has afforded our research group with computing power that goes far beyond what we initially hoped," said Vijay Pande, Associate Professor of Chemistry at Stanford University and Folding@home project lead. "Thanks to PS3, we are now essentially able to fast-forward several aspects of our research by a decade, which will greatly help us make more discoveries and advancements in our studies of several different diseases."
The PlayStation 3. Blu-ray player. Video game console. Humanitarian. More »

folding@home

Team Kotaku Hits 150th

The official Playstation Blog recently reminded Playstation 3 owners about the very cool Folding@Home project that can run on your Playstation 3. It seems that the top, or at least one of the top, PS3-powered Folding@Home teams is 2CH@PS3, which is ranked 47th in the world. That is followed by PS3Forums.com which is ranked 67th. I just checked and Team Kotaku is all the way up to 150th. That's out of the 72,066 teams in the world. Pretty damn impressive, if you ask me. More »

sharing is caring!

Sony :( at Microsoft Thinking About Folding@Home


Emoticons really are a visual language, aren't they? Microsoft hasn't even gotten their mitts on the Folding@Home project (though they have hinted at having little daydreams about it), but Sony, forever the jealous type, is already whining about it. When Jack Tretton of SCEA was interviewed by GamePro, he had this to say about the rumor: More »

folding@livearcade

Xbox 360 Folding Project Possible

"My console has better graphics!" "My console has better games!" "My consoles has contributed more computing cycles towards helping understand and solve health problems than yours!" More »

folding@home

PS3 Folding Kicking Ass, Getting Update

Over 250,000 PS3 systems have registered for the Folding@home program since its launch in March, delivering nearly 400 teraflops of computing power at any given moment, more than doubling the pre-PlayStation power output. More »

ps3

The Price Of Constant Folding@Home

As a current participant in the Folding@Home project via my PLAYSTATION 3, I, too, have wondered about the financial impact of keeping my console on 24/7 to contribute to the cause. IGN has gone ahead and determined roughly how much an always-on PS3 would hit its owners in the wallet by using the Nebraska state Electricity Rate Comparison chart against the wattage required to run Folding@Home number crunching. More »

folding@home

Clips: Dr. Marks Explains Folding@Home

Stanford University's Folding@Home program has gotten a lot of play this week, and so it should. The program harnesses the power of idling PC's and PS3's to calculate data that will eventually help find cures for Parkinson's Disease, Alzheimer's, various types of Cancer and other diseases. More »

top

Join Kotaku's Folding@home Team. Do It!

Sony has teamed up with Stanford Unversity for Folding@home. The project is a distributed computing network of PS3s to help study the causes of a number of diseases such as Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, cystic fibrosis and many cancers. More »

folding@home

PS3 Dominates Folding@Home

PlayStation 3 users around the world have found a completely new way to kick ass online. Take a look at the performance statistics for the Folding@home program as of 8am Eastern this morning:


OS Type Current TFLOPS* Active CPUs Total CPUs
Windows 1511589431624489
Mac OS X/PowerPC 7870695321
Mac OS X/Intel 727007184
Linux 3524924215628
GPU 416892178
PLAYSTATION®3 2511023811172
Total 492206200 1955972

Take a look at those TFLOPS. That's PS3 machines delivering over 251 trillion floating point operations per second, 100 trillion more than ten times the number of active PC CPUs, and the number is growing every time I refresh the stats page. Say what you will of the PS3 as a game machine, but this is pretty spectacular to see. Warms the cockles something fierce, and I do so love warm cockles. More »

folding@home

Clip: Folding@home Live And In Action

Japan-based reader Chris downloaded the 1.6 PS3 update and took some footage of Folding@home in action. Looks pretty neat — Really neat, actually. Anyone else download this? What do you think?
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folding@home

Gallery: PS3 Folding@Home

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folding@home

PS3 Distributive Computing Network Hits in March

This is super cool. Sony Computer Entertainment is teaming up with Stanford University to create a distributed computing network of PS3s to help study the causes of a number of diseases such as Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, cystic fibrosis and many cancers. More »