We had an interesting discussion a few years ago at JPL about the issues 
surrounding running background tasks like Seti@Home on desktop computers  – 
Since the government buys the computers and pays for the electricity, is this a 
“legal or appropriate use of government resources” – albeit one that would be 
very difficult to assign a specific value to.  There are also a host of 
security questions that come from such things.



From: Beowulf <beowulf-boun...@beowulf.org> on behalf of William Johnson 
<meatheadmer...@gmail.com>
Date: Tuesday, November 26, 2019 at 7:24 PM
To: Chuck Petras <chuck_pet...@selinc.com>, "beowulf@beowulf.org" 
<beowulf@beowulf.org>
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [Beowulf] Is Crowd Computing the Next Big Thing?


The technology for this type of distributed computing already has a large 
community.
The BOINC Project (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing) has 
existed since 2002 and allows people to donate idle computing time to large 
science and math computation projects.
They have clients to run on many types of platforms with a system of job 
servers that can benchmark and customize workloads to the device/processors 
(CPUs/GPUs) participating. Clients that exist to participate already range from 
desktops and tablets to game systems like PS3, abstracting calculations from 
platforms and processors, and sometimes available to run in virtual box on a 
machine to keep them separate.
It could be nice to earn a return on this type of computation, current projects 
through BOINC are largely in the realm of university research and all 
participant volunteer their resources. I'm not sure what types of commercial 
work loads might be willing to pay for this type of computing resource. It does 
seem to limit types of jobs to data sets that can be batch divided into 
parallel units, to work large problem spaces. That brings to mind more research 
uses, and not many commercial uses.
Perhaps computational modeling for research and development (like failure 
testing several potential models), or analysis of geological mining survey 
data, or process flow analysis for large manufacturing and distribution 
systems. But it makes me think most of marketing analysis with the current 
focus in big data projects from corporate environments I see in articles and 
instructional materials.



On Tue, Nov 26, 2019 at 3:19 PM Chuck Petras 
<chuck_pet...@selinc.com<mailto:chuck_pet...@selinc.com>> wrote:
Seen the below where a company wants to rent your smartphone as a cloud 
computing resource. From a few years ago there was a company making space 
heaters that contained servers to compute and heat your house.

Are there any classes of problems that would be monitizeable in a grid 
computing environment to make those efforts financially viable?

Is Crowd Computing the Next Big Thing?
https://www.eejournal.com/article/is-crowd-computing-the-next-big-thing/

Heating houses with 'nerd power'
https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-32816775#<https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-32816775>

Chuck Petras, PE**
Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories, Inc
Pullman, WA  99163  USA
http://www.selinc.com

SEL Synchrophasors - A New View of the Power System 
<http://synchrophasor.selinc.com>

Making Electric Power Safer, More Reliable, and More Economical (R)

** Registered in Oregon.

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