The Folding@home distributed computing project is now utilizing donated CPU cycles to research the Coronavirus (COVID-19) virus. Folding@home is a project founded by Pande Lab at Stanford University ...
CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, is contributing 10,000 computer cores to Folding@home, the project that's using distributed computing power to simulate the dynamics of proteins ...
The Folding@home distributed computing project has added twenty new Coronavirus (COVID-19) projects since earlier this week that uses donated CPU or GPU power to research new treatment methods.
As the coronavirus continues to spread, Standford University's Folding@home project announced that CPU-based protein folding COVID-19 jobs are headed to the distributed computing client. For those who ...
4 Comments on As Folding@Home tackles the coronavirus, volunteers deliver more compute power than the world’s top supercomputers Pioneering distributed computing project SETI@home announced this month ...
Utilizing untapped computing power to help the fight against diseases has been a longstanding tradition for PC gamers, but now there’s another threat to take down: coronavirus. A thread on Reddit is ...
The Hackaday community has answered the call and put their computers put to work folding proteins found in the coronavirus. Team_Hack-a-Day ranks #44 in the world so far this month, and I’ve seen us ...
Hi there. I’m at Stanford, and we’re about to see the first demo of the PS3’s Folding at Home app. Folding’s Dr Vijay Pande and SCEA’s Jack Tretton are presenting. More in a bit, as I update this post ...
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