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IBM, screensaver to tackle smallpox

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 05 February 2003 - 11:28 · 6 comments & 828 views

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IBM and a host of technology partners are working on software for the U.S. Defense Department that will let the idle time of anyone's computer be devoted to investigate antismallpox drugs, the companies are expected to announce Wednesday. The project will take the form of a screensaver people can put on their PCs, in a effort similar to SETI@home, which scours radio telescope signals for evidence of extraterrestrial life. A group of research institutes will use the research and send their results to the Defense Department.

Partners in the effort include UnitedDevices, a company founded by SETI@home organizers; Accelrys, which specializes in pharmaceutical and chemical calculation software; and Evotec OAI, which provides drug discovery services. Although a vaccination exists for smallpox, there are no drugs for treating infected people, researchers involved in the effort say. Among those who plan to use the distributed calculation engine are Oxford University and the University of Essex in the United Kingdom; the Robarts Research Institute, the Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and the University of Western Ontario.

The partners are labeling the project the Smallpox Research Grid, illustrating the gradual broadening of the term "grid." "Grid" is now used to describe a range of systems, from loosely connected groups of thousands or millions of PCs to a collection of blade servers in a single chassis. Originally, grids generally were a federation of servers--often higher-end machines or supercomputers--that collectively tackle computing problems.

News source: c|net


While grids are currently popular in academic and research settings, IBM and others believe they will be useful in businesses as well. IBM last month released 10 grid products.

If the Smallpox Research Grid can round up 2 million participants, the collective computing power could be as high as 1.1 petaflops, or 1.1 quadrillion calculations per second, the companies said. Potential participants can download a screensaver at Grid.org.

IBM is providing back-end infrastructure to the effort, including more than one of its top-end p690 "Regatta" servers, DB2 software and its enterprise storage server "Shark" system.


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#1 leebobs on 05 Feb 2003 - 12:01
Err.... We (The human race) cured small pox like a hundred years ago. But late to the party IBM?!?
#2 MadDog on 05 Feb 2003 - 13:57
There are samples of the virus out there, a few of which are unaccounted for. It's feared that Iraq and some other shady nations may have some and would be willing to use it as a bioterror weapon.
#3 Tager on 05 Feb 2003 - 19:02
I literally live 5 min from UWO (Univ of Western Ontario). Go Mustangs! There could be other or new strains of smallpox which may not have been covered under the 'cure'.
#4 arpad on 05 Feb 2003 - 20:28
We don't have a "cure", we have a vaccine... They're completely different things... Through the use of vaccines, we've eradicated smallpox to the point that it is not found in nature anymore, rather only in labs for research and bioterror purposes. We have limited knowledge of effective treatments for smallpox, so it is a very real possibility that it could be released and wreak havoc since we don't vaccinate for smallpox anymore.
#5 DavidPollard on 06 Feb 2003 - 08:58
Where is this screensaver ? Thanks dp
#6 arpad on 06 Feb 2003 - 19:08
grid.org, intel, ibm (and others) all use the uniteddevices client that has been running cancer and other ligands for a while... You can get it through either grid.org or ud.com They're going to incorporate the smallpox ligands into the current schedule for the ud client, this way everybody doesn't have to download a separate client just for the smallpox research.

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