If you are unfamiliar with Folding@Home, the project was launched back in 2000 and uses distributed computing to assist researchers around the world across a wide array of health concerns including Alzheimer’s, cancer, influenza, HIV, Hungtington’s and more.
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So how does this work? The Folding@Home software will take unused computational resources on your computer and puts them to work on a small piece of simulation, which gets sent back to its servers to be joined with the rest of the simulations. While the impact on your system should go virtually unnoticed, the combined power of all the networked computers in the Folding@Home system is over 100 petaFLOPS, putting it on par with some of the fastest supercomputers in the world. Installing the software is easy. Simply go to the Folding@Home downloads page and you will find available versions for macOS, Windows, and Linux (Debian, Mint, Ubuntu, Redhat, Centos, and Fedora). If you want greater control over the amount of processing power that the software uses on your computer, you should choose the custom install as the default setting for the software to operate whenever your computer is on.