Folding@Home is a distributed computing project created by Stanford University to allow anybody with access to a PC a chance to contribute to important research which can lead finding cures for diseases such as Alzheimer's Disease, Cancer, Parkinson's Disease, and more.
Basically, anyone can download the Folding@Home client and devote their PC's resources to performing calculations, uploading the results to Stanford's database.
Yesterday, the PS3 received its Firmware 1.6 update, which, in addition to other neato additions such as background downloading (finally -.-), allows PS3 owners to download a specifically designed Folding@Home client created by Stanford and Sony Computer Entertainment. The new software takes advantage of the CELL Broadband Engine's powerful computing resources and the growing install base of PLAYSTATION 3 owners. Now, literally anyone who owns a PS3 system can download the software and run calculations on their console for Stanford. The increased awareness of the project as well as the increased computational power thanks to the PS3 system should increase the effectiveness of Stanford's great work so far.
To learn more about the Folding@Home project, check out folding.stanford.edu.
Basically, anyone can download the Folding@Home client and devote their PC's resources to performing calculations, uploading the results to Stanford's database.
Yesterday, the PS3 received its Firmware 1.6 update, which, in addition to other neato additions such as background downloading (finally -.-), allows PS3 owners to download a specifically designed Folding@Home client created by Stanford and Sony Computer Entertainment. The new software takes advantage of the CELL Broadband Engine's powerful computing resources and the growing install base of PLAYSTATION 3 owners. Now, literally anyone who owns a PS3 system can download the software and run calculations on their console for Stanford. The increased awareness of the project as well as the increased computational power thanks to the PS3 system should increase the effectiveness of Stanford's great work so far.
To learn more about the Folding@Home project, check out folding.stanford.edu.
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