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This is obviously being quite heavily promoted at the moment.
The background is that Stanford University School of Medicine in the States setup folding@home in the early 2000's. It's a distributed computing project that shares resources from the customers computer which they're not using such as CPU and GPU power. It runs in the background and won't affect the user in anyway, it only takes resources that aren't being utilised. You can set it to be running whilst you're using the computer, or only when it's not being used.
This power is then utilised by the university to run protein folding simulations to work out cures for various viruses. The more resources they have, the quicker they're able to run the simulations and hopefully find a cure. Obviously at the moment, this is quite a valuable resource if you feel open to joining.
It's fully legit and you can remain fully anonymous, or create an account in which case you build up points (although I'm not sure what these can be used for).
I've installed it on all the PC's in the house and other than increased fans on my laptop (because I've set mine to use as much spare resource as possible, highest setting), you wouldn't know it's running.
If you've got any kind of thermal issues, I'd suggest only running it on Low setting.
This is obviously being quite heavily promoted at the moment.
The background is that Stanford University School of Medicine in the States setup folding@home in the early 2000's. It's a distributed computing project that shares resources from the customers computer which they're not using such as CPU and GPU power. It runs in the background and won't affect the user in anyway, it only takes resources that aren't being utilised. You can set it to be running whilst you're using the computer, or only when it's not being used.
This power is then utilised by the university to run protein folding simulations to work out cures for various viruses. The more resources they have, the quicker they're able to run the simulations and hopefully find a cure. Obviously at the moment, this is quite a valuable resource if you feel open to joining.
It's fully legit and you can remain fully anonymous, or create an account in which case you build up points (although I'm not sure what these can be used for).
What is Folding@home and how can we use it to fight the Coronavirus?
Read our guide on what Folding@home is and how you can use this free software to help fight the Coronavirus, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson's, cancer and more
www.pocket-lint.com
Standford's Folding@home project looking to tap into latent PC power to tackle the coronavirus
Standford’s Folding@home project has been running for a number of years using the donated idle hours of computers to help undertake complex calculations for researchers. With the advent of the novel coronavirus, researchers are now putting out a call to help develop potential treatments for...
www.notebookcheck.net
Help Cure Coronavirus with Your PC's Leftover Processing Power
Protein folding is key to finding a cure.
www.tomshardware.com
Join the battle against COVID-19 coronavirus using your computer
Sad that the SETI@home project has come to an end? Here's how you can use your computer to help find and develop new drugs to fight coronavirus/COVID-19.
www.zdnet.com
Nvidia's calling on gaming PC owners to put their systems to work fighting COVID-19
Folding@home has new projects for the study of coronavirus
www.gamesradar.com
I've installed it on all the PC's in the house and other than increased fans on my laptop (because I've set mine to use as much spare resource as possible, highest setting), you wouldn't know it's running.
If you've got any kind of thermal issues, I'd suggest only running it on Low setting.
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