Ability of computers running WoW to fold: On my
measely machines I average 500 points per day when they are left on overnight with nothing running, when running World of Warcraft I average 220-250 points per day. I do mean measely machines by the way lol.
Like I said, I personally never notice when a unit is uploading or downloading, whether its the ps3 or any of the crappy comps on my network but I only run the CPU clients so I have no experience with SMP or GPU clients, by the looks of the points of the highest wow folder on The Azerothian Science League his machines are very active with uploads/downloads.
Still... an upload/download task schedule feature would be nice.
The idea is noble; there are, in fact, 11 million players worldwide, most of whom by definition have hardware capable of Folding. However, I think you vastly overestimate their tech competence, willingness to participate in an honest and constructive manner, and desire/ability to leave machines on when not playing the game. There would be 3 million lost WUs, 5 million forum posts all asking the same basic FAQ questions, and 7 million new threads asking to change the point system.
11 million subscribers, some double ups or triple ups, like myself i have 3 accounts, at one stage 4 for the family, however I imagine most of the double ups would have more than one machine in their household... conservatively I think the figure could be cut to 9 million CPUs/GPUs. I think probably half would be under the age of 16 and therefore incapable of making the decision to use the family computer to fold unless there was some ingame incentive that they could beg their parents about
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
[4.5million]. A good quarter of those remaining would find any way they could to be deconstructive and dishonest, leaving 3 million some...
3 Million uninformed and unconcerned people looking to clog up the boards with questions.... couldn't agree more there, this would be a problem without a doubt, I would imagine this to be the main reason Blizzard would reject the idea, support staff don't need to be supporting a program that isn't even theirs. A self install, self updating service version of all clients would be ideal in this case, it would also have to have an uninstall feature.
I do think, however, that you underestimate the lengths people will go to in MMOs to give back to the community and then beside that, the lengths people will go to in order to get something "special" [think: Headless horseman mount, Winterspring Tiger, Spectral Tiger Mount (still 600+$), Lucky Fishing Hat, Murloc pet, Blizzard Bear Mount].
I never supposed it would be easy for the folding@home team, just easy for Blizzard, so long as the right concessions were made.
- Some way of tracking a World of Warcraft user's contributions to assign rewards [even if its an automated email upon receiving 100 work units or something]
- World of Warcraft client tracking [GFLOP contributions specifically from world of warcraft users/referees]
- Self install clients [Surely amongst the current folding@home users there are enough with technical expertise required to simplify the install process]
- Task schedule for upload/download only, allow work to continue whenever the program is running.
The first one wouldn't be necessary as Blizzard might be happy for the Pande group to "raffle" off the ingame rewards to all the users, may encourage more people to join World of Warcraft. Yes it would be some work.. but there is a lot of potential computing power there.
Although it would take considerably less work for both parties if Blizzard simply made mention of folding@home, without any rewards or incentives, the recruitment rate would be equally reduced however.