Folding@home the most powerful distributed computing network in the
world.
Today Sony announced that the PLAYSTATION 3 computer entertainment
systems, as part of Stanford University's Folding@home(TM) program, has
enabled the distributed computing project to be recognised by Guinness
World Records(TM) as the most powerful distributed computing network in the
world.
The record was initially set on September 16, 2007 as Folding@home
surpassed one petaflop (A petaflop is the ability of a computer to do one quadrillion
floating point operations per second (FLOPS)), a computing milestone that has never been
reached before by a distributed computing network. In addition to this, the
collective efforts of our users have enabled PS3 alone to reach the
petaflop mark on September 23, 2007.
The record is a testament to the widespread participation of PS3 users
from around the world-currently more than 670,000 unique PS3 users have
registered to the Folding@home network, bringing the overall computing
power of the program to more than a petaflop. Thanks to PS3's powerful Cell
Broadband Engine(TM) (Cell/B.E.), scientists will now be able to make
greater progress in their studies of protein folding and its link to
diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and certain forms of cancer.
"To have Folding@home recognized by Guinness World Records as the most
powerful distributed computing network ever is a reflection of the
extraordinary worldwide participation by gamers and consumers around the
world and for that we are very grateful," said Vijay Pande, Associate
Professor of Chemistry at Stanford University and Folding@home project
lead. "Without them we would not be able to make the advancements we have
made in our studies of several different diseases. But it is clear that
none of this would be even remotely possible without the power of PS3, it
has increased our research capabilities by leaps and bounds."
"To have PS3 play such a large role in allowing Folding@home to be
honored by Guinness World Records is truly incredible," said Masayuki
Chatani, Executive Vice President & Chief Technology Officer, Technology
Platform, Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. "This record is clear evidence
of the power of PS3 and the contributions that it is making to the
Folding@home network, and more importantly, scientific research."
The Folding@home program up until recently leveraged only the
distributed computing power of personal computers (PC) from around the
world. The PCs that made up the Folding@home network numbered roughly
200,000 giving the program the equivalent of about one-quarter of a
petaflop. On March 15, 2007, PS3 joined the program and since then more
than 670,000 unique PS3 users have registered to the Folding@home network,
bringing the overall computing power of the program to more than a
petaflop.
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