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BOINC itself is the white-label open-source[1] tech that other projects use, including SETI@home. I participate in IBM's World Community Grid[2] project, which uses the BOINC client. (it's running on my home machines, including some old/spare Android devices)

The IBM project is definitely active — their homepage currently says there are 721k volunteers participating, and there's a monthly email newsletter that covers their sub-projects' progress.

For an example of a current project, see OpenZika[3].

I see projects like BOINC and Jason Scott's ArchiveTeam Warrior[4] as a sort of "botnet for good" — if you have some bandwidth + margin in your monthly electricity budget, why not? I'm essentially spending a bit of electricity each month to help contribute to (and be a participant in) these projects. Their marketing must be working, because it "feels good" to be a part of them. :)

I don't know enough about CPU use + electrical costs to truly gauge the impact of my devices, e.g. vs. spending the same amount of $ on a fast, modern server running on clean power in an Icelandic datacenter. But having an old laptop or two + a few old Android devices running 24x7 hasn't noticeably appeared on my monthly PG&E bill.

[1] https://github.com/BOINC/boinc

[2] https://www.worldcommunitygrid.org/discover.action

[3] https://www.worldcommunitygrid.org/research/zika/overview.do

[4] http://www.archiveteam.org/index.php?title=ArchiveTeam_Warri...



I am wondering if it's more efficient to spend CPU cycles of PCs and mobile phones at home at the cost of increasing the electricity bill or to donate the same amount directly to the project so that they can use it for optimised (GPU?) servers that have better computational power per dollar.




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