Two popular non-profit distributed computing projects are distributed.net[1] and SETI@home[2]. United Devices[3] is the largest commercial distributed computing network. |
Two popular non-profit distributed computing projects are distributed.net[1] and SETI@home[2]. United Devices[3] is the largest commercial distributed computing network. Some will venture that Distributed.net is not a non-profit project since the main RC5-64 project they do is indeed for a cash prize from RSA Labs. Many others exist, such as the popular Genome@Home[4] and Folding@Home[5] Distributed computing works so well because users like to see stats and the even though the client may be using 90% or more of their CPU, it runs at an extremely low priority so that it only uses power that would be wasted anyway. |
Two popular non-profit distributed computing projects are distributed.net[1] and SETI@home[2]. United Devices[3] is the largest commercial distributed computing network. Some will venture that Distributed.net is not a non-profit project since the main RC5-64 project they do is indeed for a cash prize from RSA Labs. Many others exist, such as the popular Genome@Home[4] and Folding@Home[5]
Distributed computing works so well because users like to see stats and the even though the client may be using 90% or more of their CPU, it runs at an extremely low priority so that it only uses power that would be wasted anyway.
Distributed computing is also an active area of research with abundant literature. The most known distributed computing conferences are The International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks [6] and the ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing [7]. Journals include the Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing [8].