I just downloaded GPUgrid, which it says is specifically optimized for nvidia gpus (cool, since I have one), but it seems that when it's running things that involve even a tiny fraction of the gpu, such as moving windows around, are unacceptably choppy. Any ideas on how to stop that? For now, I stopped the project entirely. It's too bad that it seems to take the entire GPU, including cycles that I need - I have a few projects running right now that are maxing out the CPU, but if I run something else that needs a bit of CPU power, the distributed computing project hands them right over. In fact, I don't notice any change in performance with the CPU maxed out like this.
Distributed Computing Projects Like F@h
#21
Posted 17 May 2012 - 03:45 PM
Spoiler
"The Internet will be used for all kinds of spurious things, including fake quotes from smart people." -Albert EinsteinNeed a Windows ISO image?
#22
Posted 18 May 2012 - 02:26 AM
LiveBrianD, on 17 May 2012 - 02:39 PM, said:
I just added einstein@home. I guess the SETI@home guys don't want any cpu cycles from me - the site is still down, and I can't add it to BOINC.
Berkeley.edu had a lightning strike. Their servers and acouple of neighborhoods around the university were without power. Try back later.
#23
Posted 18 May 2012 - 02:29 AM
Go to this thread... http://einstein.phys...ead.php?id=9445 .
It talks about how the software isn't perfect, and what they are still trying to fix.
It talks about how the software isn't perfect, and what they are still trying to fix.
#24
Posted 18 May 2012 - 08:40 AM
Hmm, I contacted them and apparently there was an unexpected outage in one of the buildings. I guess that's it then.
Spoiler
"The Internet will be used for all kinds of spurious things, including fake quotes from smart people." -Albert EinsteinNeed a Windows ISO image?
#25
Posted 19 May 2012 - 01:22 PM
So, it looks like the SETI site is finally up, so I added that project. That also uses the GPU (right now it's at ~80-90% usage), and yet regular desktop performance isn't impacted at all (I even hit start+tab and it was completely smooth). OK, how can that do it while GPUgrid can't?
Say, how does it decide how many instances of a project to download? For instance, I have 15 instances of rosetta@home, but I manually paused all but 1 so I could run some other projects (right now, I'm running climateprediction.net on one core - I'd like to run 2 of these but it doesn't support that, rosetta@home on one core, einstein@home on two cores, and seti@home on the GPU - it uses about 3% of the CPU). All the rosetta instances have a deadline a week from today (the 26th), but with each one taking 4 hours, there's no way I'm going to get all of those done in time. (2 done, 1 running, 12 paused) That would mean running my PC about 7.5 hours a day, which I probably won't do. What does it do if a project is past the deadline?
Say, how does it decide how many instances of a project to download? For instance, I have 15 instances of rosetta@home, but I manually paused all but 1 so I could run some other projects (right now, I'm running climateprediction.net on one core - I'd like to run 2 of these but it doesn't support that, rosetta@home on one core, einstein@home on two cores, and seti@home on the GPU - it uses about 3% of the CPU). All the rosetta instances have a deadline a week from today (the 26th), but with each one taking 4 hours, there's no way I'm going to get all of those done in time. (2 done, 1 running, 12 paused) That would mean running my PC about 7.5 hours a day, which I probably won't do. What does it do if a project is past the deadline?
This post has been edited by LiveBrianD: 19 May 2012 - 01:33 PM
Spoiler
"The Internet will be used for all kinds of spurious things, including fake quotes from smart people." -Albert EinsteinNeed a Windows ISO image?
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