All,
The CentOS Folding@Home team has cracked the top 10% of all the folding teams.
We could use some more members that have CPU Cycles to spare :)
Folding at Home is a great distributed computing program that is used to process items for medical research teams. It is similar to SETI at Home (if you are familiar with that).
Here is info on Folding AT Home: http://folding.stanford.edu/
Here is information on Team CentOS: http://www.sharons.org.uk/cf.html
Here are our current Team CentOS stats: http://vspx27.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/main.py?qtype=teampage&teamnum=48721
Join the Fold :)
Thanks, Johnny Hughes
Johnny Hughes wrote:
All,
The CentOS Folding@Home team has cracked the top 10% of all the folding teams.
We could use some more members that have CPU Cycles to spare :)
Folding at Home is a great distributed computing program that is used to process items for medical research teams. It is similar to SETI at Home (if you are familiar with that).
Here is info on Folding AT Home: http://folding.stanford.edu/
Here is information on Team CentOS: http://www.sharons.org.uk/cf.html
Here are our current Team CentOS stats: http://vspx27.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/main.py?qtype=teampage&teamnum=48721
Join the Fold :)
Thanks, Johnny Hughesan/listinfo/centos
might want to check your team setup. Centos is grouped with all the non-assigned users so your units are not counting to your own team according to standford's stats engine.
what tipped me off is that Centos is not able to be found at http://folding.extremeoverclocking.com/
On Fri, 2006-04-07 at 17:46 -0400, William Warren wrote:
might want to check your team setup. Centos is grouped with all the non-assigned users so your units are not counting to your own team according to standford's stats engine.
what tipped me off is that Centos is not able to be found at http://folding.extremeoverclocking.com/
I think that this is because they only track teams in the top 2000 and we are currently 4297 of 43593.
Hopefully we will move into the top 2000 soon :)
Thanks, Johnny Hughes
Johnny Hughes wrote:
All,
The CentOS Folding@Home team has cracked the top 10% of all the folding teams.
We could use some more members that have CPU Cycles to spare :)
Folding at Home is a great distributed computing program that is used to process items for medical research teams. It is similar to SETI at Home (if you are familiar with that).
Here is info on Folding AT Home: http://folding.stanford.edu/
Here is information on Team CentOS: http://www.sharons.org.uk/cf.html
Here are our current Team CentOS stats: http://vspx27.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/main.py?qtype=teampage&teamnum=48721
Join the Fold :)
Thanks, Johnny Hughes
is there any particular reason as to why the download for linux system is an ".exe" file? Might kind of make it a little hard to run...
just a thought.
On Tue, 2006-04-11 at 07:13 -0400, Mark Weaver wrote:
Johnny Hughes wrote:
All,
The CentOS Folding@Home team has cracked the top 10% of all the folding teams.
We could use some more members that have CPU Cycles to spare :)
Folding at Home is a great distributed computing program that is used to process items for medical research teams. It is similar to SETI at Home (if you are familiar with that).
Here is info on Folding AT Home: http://folding.stanford.edu/
Here is information on Team CentOS: http://www.sharons.org.uk/cf.html
Here are our current Team CentOS stats: http://vspx27.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/main.py?qtype=teampage&teamnum=48721
Join the Fold :)
Thanks, Johnny Hughes
is there any particular reason as to why the download for linux system is an ".exe" file? Might kind of make it a little hard to run...
just a thought.
It's just a name :)
They have named the executables the same thing regardless of what they run on.
It runs fine if it is chmod'ed properly.
Johnny Hughes wrote:
On Tue, 2006-04-11 at 07:13 -0400, Mark Weaver wrote:
Johnny Hughes wrote:
All,
The CentOS Folding@Home team has cracked the top 10% of all the folding teams.
We could use some more members that have CPU Cycles to spare :)
Folding at Home is a great distributed computing program that is used to process items for medical research teams. It is similar to SETI at Home (if you are familiar with that).
Here is info on Folding AT Home: http://folding.stanford.edu/
Here is information on Team CentOS: http://www.sharons.org.uk/cf.html
Here are our current Team CentOS stats: http://vspx27.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/main.py?qtype=teampage&teamnum=48721
Join the Fold :)
Thanks, Johnny Hughes
is there any particular reason as to why the download for linux system is an ".exe" file? Might kind of make it a little hard to run...
just a thought.
It's just a name :)
They have named the executables the same thing regardless of what they run on.
It runs fine if it is chmod'ed properly.
even on x86_64 hardware with glibc.i386 installed :)
On 4/8/06, Johnny Hughes mailing-lists@hughesjr.com wrote:
Join the Fold :)
Just checking, am I in the right team if I have team=48721 in client.cfg? Thanks.
-- -- Alin Osan
Barry L. Kline wrote:
Alin Osan wrote:
Just checking, am I in the right team if I have team=48721 in client.cfg? Thanks.
Yes.
Has anyone else noticed strange behavior running this program? So far every time I've run it, it either locks my system hard, or crashes the window manager. Not a good sign...
On Wed, 2006-04-12 at 18:23 -0400, Mark Weaver wrote:
Barry L. Kline wrote:
Alin Osan wrote:
Just checking, am I in the right team if I have team=48721 in client.cfg? Thanks.
Yes.
Has anyone else noticed strange behavior running this program? So far every time I've run it, it either locks my system hard, or crashes the window manager. Not a good sign...
Not here, I've got it running on three processors with no problems.
PME