PS3 triples Folding@Home computing power
The PS3’s launch in Europe has been hailed by Gamestation as a “success”, and although eBay sales aren’t going down amazingly well at the moment, what Sony’s PS3 lacks in auction fever it makes up in curing diseases all over the world. That’s right, we aren’t talking about a game like Call of Duty – we’re talking about the PS3’s involvement in curing Alzheimer’s disease with Stanford University‘s Folding@Home project.
You’ve probably seen our call for PS3 users to unite and join the QJ.Net Folding@Home Team, but basically what it does is use your PS3’s idle CPU while investigating protein folding which has been thought to be the root of diseases such as AlzheimerÂ’s Disease, ParkinsonÂ’s Disease, cystic fibrosis, Huntington’s Disease, and some types of cancer. You may ask why we’re posting this once again, but this isn’t just an appeal to ask you to join.
The PS3 has already made a significant impact on the Folding@Home, with PS3s providing 346 Teraflops of their CPU power, close to triple of what all Windows PCs running the program and 100 more TFLOPs than Windows, Mac, Linux, GPU, and other Operating Systems put together. We would like to thank everyone on the QJ.Net Folding@Home team who have joined since our last post and have helped the PS3 achieve this great feat. QJ’s Folding@Home team stats can be viewed here.
So as you can see, the PS3 really is making a difference. You may think that your PS3 won’t be responsible for curing a disease, but think about it: your PS3 has over 10 times the TFLOPS (processing power) of the average computer – put it to good use. Who knows, the PS3 could be the thing that cures a disease such as AlzheimerÂ’s once and for all. Even if you don’t have a PS3 yet, it’s quite cool to know that a console you support is giving something back to the world.
If you have just got a PS3 from Europe or another part of the world and would like to donate your processing power to a good cause, click here to learn more about how to join the QJ.Net Folding@Home team. Even if you don’t have your PS3 yet, you can download the Folding@Home application to your PC too, it just won’t be as effective as the Cell-powered PS3. But you’re still helping.
The PS3’s launch in Europe has been hailed by Gamestation as a “success”, and although eBay sales aren’t going down amazingly well at the moment, what Sony’s PS3 lacks in auction fever it makes up in curing diseases all over the world. That’s right, we aren’t talking about a game like Call of Duty – we’re talking about the PS3’s involvement in curing Alzheimer’s disease with Stanford University‘s Folding@Home project.
You’ve probably seen our call for PS3 users to unite and join the QJ.Net Folding@Home Team, but basically what it does is use your PS3’s idle CPU while investigating protein folding which has been thought to be the root of diseases such as AlzheimerÂ’s Disease, ParkinsonÂ’s Disease, cystic fibrosis, Huntington’s Disease, and some types of cancer. You may ask why we’re posting this once again, but this isn’t just an appeal to ask you to join.
The PS3 has already made a significant impact on the Folding@Home, with PS3s providing 346 Teraflops of their CPU power, close to triple of what all Windows PCs running the program and 100 more TFLOPs than Windows, Mac, Linux, GPU, and other Operating Systems put together. We would like to thank everyone on the QJ.Net Folding@Home team who have joined since our last post and have helped the PS3 achieve this great feat. QJ’s Folding@Home team stats can be viewed here.
So as you can see, the PS3 really is making a difference. You may think that your PS3 won’t be responsible for curing a disease, but think about it: your PS3 has over 10 times the TFLOPS (processing power) of the average computer – put it to good use. Who knows, the PS3 could be the thing that cures a disease such as AlzheimerÂ’s once and for all. Even if you don’t have a PS3 yet, it’s quite cool to know that a console you support is giving something back to the world.
If you have just got a PS3 from Europe or another part of the world and would like to donate your processing power to a good cause, click here to learn more about how to join the QJ.Net Folding@Home team. Even if you don’t have your PS3 yet, you can download the Folding@Home application to your PC too, it just won’t be as effective as the Cell-powered PS3. But you’re still helping.