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By running the Folding@home software you can contribute to the world's largest supercomputer and help medical research. You can fold on CPUs, GPUs and under almost any OS going. Our guides will ...
Folding@home is certainly a worthier cause to lend all that hardware too than trying to run Crysis (although we still doubt that farm could run it at 2560x1600 at very high, but that's beside the ...
Folding@home Two years ago, Pande launched Folding@home – a distributed computing project that so far has enlisted the aid of more than 200,000 PC owners, whose screensavers are dedicated to ...
Right-click on the folding@home system tray icon and select configure. Under the user tab, change your “User name” to the one you use currently, and the “Team number” to 78731.
When you use this feature, the Folding@home™ help screen will be specific to your PSP™ system’s controls. Use this screen if you need help in navigating Folding@home™ from your PSP™ system.
If you didn't already know, HEXUS has its very own Folding@home team which is now ranked as one of the top 250 teams in the world. Find out how you can join the team and use your computer to help ...
It's now cranking out 470 petaflops of number-crunching performance. Like other distributed computing projects, Folding@home draws on the collective power of the people and their individual PCs.
Folding@home focuses on examining every fold and twist that transforms a balloon into a giraffe, a rabbit, or Optimus Prime.
The Folding@home project allows you to join the race to understand protein-folding, misfolding and related diseases like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, cystic fibrosis and various cancers.
Folding@home connects countless computers via the internet and is now the largest supercomputer in the world, consisting of over 3.5 million CPUs and over half a million GPUs.