Interesting read
It looks like Folding@Home is coming to GPU's due to their better floating-point calculations and dynamic branching. However, it can only be done with single ATI X19xx series cards, no CrossFire setups, no Nvidia. They do plan to add CrossFire to the program.
I've never even heard of the Folding@Home project until now. What do they mean by performance issues? Is it like a benchmark program that you run for 8+ hours like Prime95?
With how powerful these GPU's are getting, I can begin to understand why we very well may see a CPU/GPU product within the next 5 years.
It looks like Folding@Home is coming to GPU's due to their better floating-point calculations and dynamic branching. However, it can only be done with single ATI X19xx series cards, no CrossFire setups, no Nvidia. They do plan to add CrossFire to the program.
Unfortunately for home users, for the time being, the number of those who can help out by donating their GPU resources is rather limited. The first beta client to be released on Monday only works on ATI GPUs, and even then only works on single X19xx cards. The research group has indicated that they are hoping to expand this to CrossFire-enabled platforms soon, along with less-powerful ATI cards.
The situation for NVIDIA users however isn't as rosy, as while the research group would like to expand this to use the latest GeForce cards, their current attempts at implementing GPU-accelerated processing on those cards has shown that NVIDIA's cards are too slow compared to ATI's to be used. Whether this is due to a subtle architectural difference between the two, or if it's a result of ATI's greater emphasis on pixel shading with this generation of cards as compared to NVIDIA we're not sure, but Folding@Home won't be coming to NVIDIA cards as long as the research group can't solve the performance problem.
I've never even heard of the Folding@Home project until now. What do they mean by performance issues? Is it like a benchmark program that you run for 8+ hours like Prime95?
With how powerful these GPU's are getting, I can begin to understand why we very well may see a CPU/GPU product within the next 5 years.