Folding at Home on your PS3

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98EXL

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So I started doing the Folding at Home on my PS3 today, kinda neat. You can do it overnight, etc, when it's not doing anything. Anyway, it seems like you can create your own teams for this and was going to gauge interest in seeing if we can start a HBT Team, and see how many protein strain calculations we can get through.
 
No way man!
They're stringing our computers together and they're doin' it for free. Let 'em pay a slice of my electric bill and I'm all for it. ;)
 
On the other hand, forgetting to turn off the system console after playing costs around EUR 375 per year for PlayStation 3 and about EUR 38 for Wii. It is easy to forget to switch off PlayStation 3 because of those five clicks required on the controller. However, if you go over to the system console itself, you need only push one button.

Source: Here
 
well.. since the controllers don't charge unless the ps3 is on (at least thats been my experiance) I do fold now and again. I'm in for a HBT team!
 
Yeah the folding at home client for PS3 is pretty neat. I play it sometimes. Its been a while since I've gotten interested in playing it.

One thing that stuck me as very interesting about is, is how many more work units get accomplished on a PS3 than on say a Quad Core Pentium Xeon. Later on when the Stats page for FAH isn't performing an update - I'll fix up a link to show you my stats page. Its pretty weird that my PS3 which isn't even left on most of the time outperforms my Quad Core Xeon Server with 2 GB of memory that runs the FAH client 24x7x365.
 
And in case any of you 80+ other people who looked at this thread (or maybe just me) wonder what the heck they are talking about, here is Folding at Home or (FAH) courtesy of Wikipedia. I was seriously thinking it was some kind of laundry game when I saw the title.
 
I'd be willing to join a HBT. I do folding occasionally, especially if I have to charge my controllers. Its for a really good cause. Its not like we're helping some people get rich.
 
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I've been crunching for the world community grid on pc. Is it possible to use this for the group?

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Just a note to say when I pointed out the cost of leaving on a PS3 I didn't fully understand FAH. I knew it was the pooling of the processers for someone else but didn't know who.

Looks like worthwhile research. That said, and without starting an environmental debate, perhaps the money spent on leaving it on would be better served as a direct donation or something?
 
I dunno, and don't care. I have a bunch of PC's running various crap around the house, I'm not worried about my least expensive power eating machine on all the time to fold....
 
Hmmm....I've always been told that leaving the PC on is better for it.....but I kind of believe there's a statute of limitations on that. If you only played the PS3 for say, 3 days a week 4 hours each time, it seems like you'd be exposing the components to unnecessary wear & tear and heat for the rest of the week. Even my laptop, which I use daily, goes into standby and eventually shuts down after a few hours of not being used. Am I wrong to do this?
 
Oh yea, you don't want to start up a computer too many times, or you'll blow the starter motor out of it.

From what I have heard, it's better to either leave the PC on all the time, or shut it down if it's not going to be in use for awhile. Shutting it down and starting it up sends a surge of electricity through all the components. I'm not sure how relevant that is in today's PCs, it's just what I've known.
 
Oh yea, you don't want to start up a computer too many times, or you'll blow the starter motor out of it.

From what I have heard, it's better to either leave the PC on all the time, or shut it down if it's not going to be in use for awhile. Shutting it down and starting it up sends a surge of electricity through all the components. I'm not sure how relevant that is in today's PCs, it's just what I've known.

Still seems to be true, haven't heard anything otherwise about it
 
Its basically true, because the only wear occurs on your PC during the initial power surge when you start it up. Powering your computer up and down most definitely will shorten its lifetime. However, worrying about harming your computer by shutting it down and starting it back up is pretty pointless because your computer will be obsolete and not of any use long before you will ever damage it by turning off and back on again.
 
I'd only do it if I got a cut of the profits from any commercially marketable products or processes derived from the computational research. Otherwise, I would not be interested in contributing my PS3 cycles for the sake of altruism.
 
Assuming they are properly cooled & vented, electronics do live a longer life if left on.

But, unlike their older ancestors who ran at a constant rate, modern CPU's consume far more power (and output more heat) when they are under load. Which means the harder it thinks, the higher your power bill. If you're going to contribute cycles to FaH, SETI, etc be sure and check your computer with a line monitor (like Kill-a-Watt) and know just how much you are actually contributing.

Not that I'm against such efforts (I've participated in SETI and distributed.net), just making sure you know it's not "free"
 
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