Our SoylentNews' Folding@Home team shows little sign of slowing down. We've now passed 400th place and barring any surprises, we might pass #300 just before the year's end. UC Berkley (387 at time of writing) is one of the next big names on our overtake list, and by the time this story goes live, we may have already passed them.
In case you aren't familiar with folding@home, it's a distributed computing project that simulates protein folding in an attempt to better understand diseases such as Alzheimer's and Huntington's and thereby help to find a cure. To that end, SoylentNews' team has — as of a query at 2016-10-07 02:10:00 (UTC) — completed just shy of 21,000 work units!
If you'd like to contribute to our team by donating some spare CPU/GPU cycles, you can get started at Stanford's Folding at Home web site. There are clients available for Linux, Windows, and OSX. Once you have installed the software, enter the TeamID 230319 to join us.
Feel free to "/join #folding" on our IRC channel if you need any help, or just want to chat.
Again, thanks to all that have participated, especially our Top 10 folders:
Related Links:
http://folding.stanford.edu
http://fah-web.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/main.py?qtype=teampage&teamnum=230319
(Score: 2) by Kymation on Friday October 07 2016, @07:54PM
What I see at the SoylentNews.org team page [stanford.edu] is different from what is quoted in TFA. Is there a different list I'm not aware of?
Whichever is correct, my thanks to everyone who is contributing.
(Score: 3, Informative) by Sir Finkus on Tuesday October 11 2016, @01:41AM
I could have sworn I replied to this.
The extreme overclocking page shows the top 10 producers in the last 24 hours, while the stanford site shows the people with the top 10 points. I usually use the stanford site for stats, but I guess I forgot this time.
Join our Folding@Home team! [stanford.edu]