Overall F@H Stats Graph?

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Nathan_P
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by Nathan_P »

bruce wrote: TFLOPS also counts only productive work on the day the WU is uploaded.

Ahh, so if a load of the g34 AMD and xeon rigs are in the middle of a WU and the WU take 25+ hours to complete, if you look on the wrong day they won't be counted as part of the TFLOPS total?
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k1wi
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by k1wi »

From what I've seen over the last few days there hasn't been a whole lot of fluctuations, but it could be lower overall because the distribution is spread over more than one day.
Jesse_V
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by Jesse_V »

screen317, if you want some historical screenshots of the Stats page, here are some that I found:
http://n4g.com/news/143113/ps3-andamp-f ... aflops/com
http://www.nvidia.com/object/io_1219747545128.html
http://www.longecity.org/forum/topic/23 ... p-barrier/
http://team52735.blogspot.com/2008_09_29_archive.html
http://www.longecity.org/forum/topic/26 ... s-barrier/
viewtopic.php?f=16&t=20011#p198840
http://pvm3ca.bay.livefilestore.com/y1p ... jpg?psid=1
Jesse_V
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by Jesse_V »

Also, I went through the old versions of the Wikipedia page looking for stats updates and those kinds of things. The date that the stats were updated was often included in the text, which made hunting for the previous update much easier. I thus compiled a list of the info I found. For each entry, I've included the URL of the specific edit, as well as the date of the previous update which it replaced, so that you can see how everything fits together and changed over time. It's your table, so feel free to pick through all of this historical info and insert it into the table. Anyway, here's what I found. I think many people might find it interesting:

Code: Select all

[Wikipedia article on Folding@home created Dec 24, 2003]

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=3351355&oldid=3316059
As of April 8, 2004, more than 140,000 CPUs were actively participating in Folding@home, with a total of over 850,000 CPUs registered with the project.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=prev&oldid=5914257
Updates stats from: April 8, 2004
As of September 14, 2004, more than 170,000 CPUs were actively participating in Folding@home, with a total of over 1 million CPUs registered with the project. With this level of participation Folding@home is one of the most powerful supercomputers in the world capable of a peak computational level of approximately 200 TeraFlops.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=11050045&oldid=10974553
Updates stats from: Sept 14, 2004
As of January 14, 2005, more than 170,000 CPUs were actively participating in Folding@home, with a total of over 1 million CPUs registered with the project. With this level of participation Folding@home is one of the most powerful supercomputers in the world capable of a peak computational level of approximately 200 TeraFlops.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=20799572&oldid=20258240
Updates stats from: Jan 14, 2005
As of August 1, 2005, more than 180,000 CPUs were actively participating in Folding@home, with a total of over 1,300,000 million CPUs registered with the project. With this level of participation Folding@home is one of the most powerful supercomputers in the world capable of a peak computational level of approximately 250 TeraFlops.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=20799670&oldid=20799572
Updates stats from: Aug 1, 2005
[Aug 11, 2005] sustained computational level of approximately 175 TeraFlops.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=29446871&oldid=28577396
Updates stats from: Aug 1, 2005
As of November 28, 2005, more than 190,000 CPUs were actively participating in Folding@home, with a total of over 1,400,000 CPUs registered with the project. With this level of participation Folding@home is one of the most powerful supercomputers in the world capable of a sustained computational level of approximately 190 teraFLOPS.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=29658728&oldid=29462885
Updates stats from: Nov 28
As of November 29, 2005, more than 200,000 CPUs were actively participating in Folding@home (active CPUs are defined as those returning work units within 50 days), with a total of nearly 1,500,000 CPUs registered with the project. 

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=30084728&oldid=30076690
Updates stats from: Nov 29, 2005
As of December 4, 2005, more than 200,000 CPUs were actively participating in Folding@home (active CPUs are defined as those returning work units within the last 50 days), with over 1,500,000 CPUs registered.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=95272478&oldid=95241354
Updates stats from: Nov 2006
[Dec 18, 2006] sustained computational level of over 220 teraFLOPS.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=99893571&oldid=99771868
Updates stats from: November 2006
As of January 2007, more than 183,000 CPUs were actively participating in Folding@Home (active CPUs are defined as those returning work units within the last 50 days), jointly capable of a sustained computational level of around 220 teraFLOPS, and with over 1,800,000 CPUs registered. 

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=117221600&oldid=117206779
March 22, 2007 More than 7,000 Playstation 3 users have downloaded the folding@home software. 

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=117237951&oldid=117231051
Updates stats from: March 20, 2007
As of March 23, 2007, more than 194,000 CPUs were actively participating in Folding@home (active CPUs are defined as those returning work units within the last 50 days) and when combined with the new high performance clients F@H is capable of a sustained computational level of around 430 teraFLOPS.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=117327883&oldid=117322588
[March 23, 2007] More than 14,300 Playstation 3 users have downloaded the F@H software. 

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=117435776&oldid=117434187
Updates stats from: March 23, 2007
More than 18,700 Playstation 3 users have downloaded the F@H software. As of late March 23, almost 95% of these are considered active (having returned work units within the last two days).

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=117579111&oldid=117569580
March 24, 2007 F@H is capable of a sustained computational level of around 860 teraFLOPS.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=117747354&oldid=117712743
Mar 23, 2007
As of March 25, 2007, more than 227,000 CPUs were actively participating in Folding@home (active CPUs are defined as those returning work units within the last 50 days) and when combined with the new high performance clients F@H is capable of a sustained computational level of around 965 teraFLOPS.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=117795150&oldid=117794656
To date, March 25, 2007 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 985 TFLOPS

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=117813953&oldid=117813832
Updates stats from: March 25, 2007
as of March 25, 2007 F@H is capable of a sustained computational level of around 990 teraFLOPS.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=117823003&oldid=117817423
Updates stats from: March 25, 2007
as of March 25, 2007 F@H is capable of a sustained computational level of over 800 teraFLOPS, peaking at around 990 teraFLOPS.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=134866752&oldid=134561309
Updates stats from: Mar 25, 2007
As of May 31, 2007 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 1 PFLOPS.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=232049211&oldid=231194360
http://kotaku.com/gaming/folding%40home/ps3-folding-kicking-ass-getting-update-255086.php
On April 26, 2007, Sony released a new version of Folding@home which improved folding performance drastically, such that the updated PS3 clients produced 1500 teraFLOPS with 52,000 clients versus the previous 400 teraFLOPS by around 24,000 clients.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=171963990&oldid=171772364
Updates stats from: May 31, 2007
As of November 3, 2007 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 1.5 PFLOPS

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=155869939&oldid=155223600
[Sept 5, 2007] The Folding@Home project has received computational results from over 2.3 million devices

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=194181240&oldid=194180889
[Feb 26, 2008] The Folding@home supercomputer currently operates at 1048 teraFLOPs, 772 teraFLOPS comes from PlayStation 3 clients.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=209873034&oldid=208784850
Updates stats from: Nov 3, 2007
As of May 3, 2008 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 2.25 PFLOPS

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=220687097&oldid=220686943
Updates stats from: May 3
As of June 21, 2008 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 2.35 PFLOPS

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=221279535&oldid=221032903
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=221279690&oldid=221279535
Updates stats from: June 21
As of June 23, 2008 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 2.42 PFLOPS

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=222119573&oldid=221947330
Updates stats from: June 23
As of June 28, 2008 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 2.52 PFLOPS

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=prev&oldid=227161602
As of July 21, 2008, GPU clients account for just over 1 petaFLOP of computational power—approximately 40% of the entire project's throughput—while employing less than 10,000 actively-contributing clients)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=229560690&oldid=229560529
Updates stats from: June 28
As of August 3, 2008 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 2.66 PFLOPS, and the project has received computational results from over 3.2 million devices since it first started.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=233135960&oldid=233048831
Updates stats from: Aug 3
As of August 20, 2008 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 3.10 PFLOPS, and the project has received computational results from over 3.2 million devices since it first started.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=233756113&oldid=233510126
Updates stats from: Aug 20
As of August 23, 2008 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 3.32 PFLOPS, and the project has received computational results from over 3.2 million devices since it first started.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=241520219&oldid=241520086
As of 9/28/08 Folding@Home Broke the four petaflop barrier. The official count as of Sun, 28 Sep 2008 05:04:09 was 4021 terraflops, with the ps3 producing 42.9% of the total terraflops, with 1728 terraflops.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=260420114&oldid=259387795
Updates stats from: March 30, 2008
As of December 27, 2008, there are 55,291 PS3s providing 1,559,000,000 MFlops of processing power.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=259122323&oldid=259120774
The Folding@home computing cluster currently operates at above 4 petaFLOPS at all times, with a large majority of the performance coming from PlayStation 3 and GPU clients. (4.61 petaFLOPS, as of December 20, 2008.)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=270132810&oldid=269700033
Updates stats from: Dec 20, 2008
The Folding@home computing cluster currently operates at above 4 petaFLOPS at all times, with a large majority of the performance coming from PlayStation 3 and GPU clients. (4.9 petaFLOPS, as of February 11, 2009.) 

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=271768329&oldid=271767993
On February 18, 2009, Folding@home achieved a performance level of 5033 TFLOPS

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=282770033&oldid=282768108
Updates stats from: Feb 18, 2009
As of April 9, 2009 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 8.1 petaflops

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=420168289&oldid=418559578
As of March 22, 2011, the Folding@home computing cluster currently operates at above 5.4 native petaFLOPS, (nearly 10 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=421220339&oldid=421219257
Updates stats from: April 9, 2009
As of March 28th 2011 the peak speed of the project overall has reached over 7 native PFLOPS (12.4 x86 PFLOPS) from around 464,000 active machines, and the project has received computational results from over 6.07 million devices since it first started.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=FLOPS&diff=347958918&oldid=347802542
Folding@Home is, as of March 2010, sustaining over 3.8 native PFLOPS

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=FLOPS&diff=357413377&oldid=357381452
Folding@Home is, as of April 21, 2010 sustaining over 6.2 ("x86" this is the standard other distributed computers in this section use, which is different from "native") PFLOPS

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=prev&oldid=442940981
As of March 28th 2011, Folding@home runs at over 12 x86 petaFLOPS, with 1.570 petaFLOPS generated by PS3s alone.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cell_(microprocessor)&diff=433135986&oldid=432601032
As of June 7th 2011, Folding@home runs at about 9.3 x86 petaFLOPS, with 1.6 petaFLOPS generated by 26,000 active PS3s alone.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=FLOPS&diff=433136419&oldid=432241974
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=prev&oldid=433137141
[June 7, 2011] The Folding@home computing cluster currently operates at about 5.6 native petaFLOPS, (about 9.3 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=442940981&oldid=442940409
Updates stats from: March 28, 2011
As of August 3rd, 2011 the peak speed of the project overall reached over 4 native PFLOPS (6.4 x86 PFLOPS) from around 429,000 active machines.>

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cell_(microprocessor)&diff=421222354&oldid=420169531
Folding@Home is sustaining over 5.6 native petaFLOPS as of June 7, 2011, or 9.3 x86 PFLOPS

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=prev&oldid=433137141
[June 7, 2011] The Folding@home computing cluster currently operates at about 5.6 native petaFLOPS, (about 9.3 x86 petaFLOPS) with a large majority of the performance coming from GPU and PlayStation 3 clients.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cell_(microprocessor)&diff=prev&oldid=433135986
Updates stats from: March 28, 2011
[June 7, 2011] As of May 7th 2011, Folding@home runs at about 9.3 x86 petaFLOPS, with 1.6 petaFLOPS generated by 26,000 active PS3s alone.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=447202268&oldid=446650618
Updates stats from: Aug 3
As of August 28, 2011, Folding@home has 403,000 active CPUs, 18,800 active GPUs, and 22,500 active PS3s, for a total of about 4.1 native petaFLOPS, (6.5 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=450741948&oldid=450585548
Updates stats from: Aug 28
As of September 15, 2011, Folding@home had 413,108 active CPUs, 18,987 active GPUs, and 20,217 active PS3s, for a total of about 4.1 native petaFLOPS, (6.4 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=454762077&oldid=454758808
Updates stats from: Sept 15
As of October 9, 2011, Folding@home had 428,222 active CPUs, 19,682 active GPUs, and 20,307 active PS3s, for a total of about 4.2 native petaFLOPS, (6.5 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=456105317&oldid=456030926
Updates stats from: Oct 9
As of October 17, 2011, Folding@home has about 432,000 active CPUs, about 20,000 active GPUs, and about 21,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 4.3 native petaFLOPS, (6.7 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=458809741&oldid=458588196
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=458809898&oldid=458809741
Updates stats from: Oct 17
As of November 3, 2011, Folding@home has about 443,000 active CPUs, about 25,000 active GPUs, and about 15,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 4.8 native petaFLOPS, (7.0 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=459253798&oldid=459229488
Updates stats from: Nov 3
As of November 5, 2011, Folding@home has about 443,000 active CPUs, about 29,000 active GPUs, and about 12,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 5.3 native petaFLOPS, (7.3 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=459984366&oldid=459920969
Updates stats from: Nov 5
As of November 10, 2011, Folding@home has about 447,000 active CPUs, about 35,000 active GPUs, and about 6,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 6.0 native petaFLOPS, (7.9 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=460340536&oldid=460168904
Updates stats from: Nov 10
As of November 12, 2011, Folding@home has about 444,000 active CPUs, about 37,000 active GPUs, and about 4,400 active PS3s, for a total of about 6.2 native petaFLOPS, (8.1 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=461185987&oldid=460341918
Updates stats from: Nov 12
As of November 17, 2011, Folding@home has about 439,000 active CPUs, about 37,000 active GPUs, and about 21,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 6.7 native petaFLOPS, (9.1 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=464955284&oldid=464311640
Updates stats from: Nov 17
As of December 9, 2011, Folding@home has about 407,000 active CPUs, about 37,000 active GPUs, and about 22,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 6.7 native petaFLOPS, (9.1 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=467396667&oldid=467395932
Updates stats from: Dec 9
As of December 23, 2011, Folding@home has about 400,000 active CPUs, about 37,000 active GPUs, and about 21,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 6.7 native petaFLOPS, (9.1 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=473359832&oldid=472814780
Updates stats from: Dec 23
As of January 26, 2011, Folding@home has about 375,000 active CPUs, about 37,000 active GPUs, and about 22,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 6.5 native petaFLOPS, (8.8 x86 petaFLOPS) 

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=478733213&oldid=478732983
Updates stats from: Jan 26
As of February 24, 2012, Folding@home has about 356,000 active CPUs, about 32,000 active GPUs, and about 26,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 5.9 native petaFLOPS, (8.4 x86 petaFLOPS)

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=482235121&oldid=482229173
Updates stats from: Feb 24
As of March 16, 2012, Folding@home has about 348,000 active CPUs, about 28,000 active GPUs, and about 28,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 5.5 native petaFLOPS (8.0 x86 petaFLOPS).

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=485530498&oldid=485390615
Updates stats from: March 16
As of April 4, 2012, the project has about 356,000 active CPUs, about 29,000 active GPUs, and about 26,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 5.6 native petaFLOPS (8.0 x86 petaFLOPS).

[March 22, 2012] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Fah.PNG

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Folding@home&diff=490855274&oldid=489971501
Updates stats from: April 6
As of May 5, 2012, the project has about 314,000 active CPUs, about 27,000 active GPUs, and about 24,000 active PS3s, for a total of about 5.1 native petaFLOPS (7.3 x86 petaFLOPS)
screen317
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by screen317 »

Jesse,

I changed the graph to reflect the date rather than the not-so-useful "number of days."

I've started adding historical data! I've gone through your 7 links above and have aggregated what I could. Will check out your Wikipedia info next.

If anyone has anything to add, clicking Insert then Add Row (above or below) makes adding data from new dates easy. :) The graph will automatically update to reflect the new data.

Cheers!

Edit: Just FYI I'm using an asterisk to denote approximate data, or stuff that I have come across that only offers the TFLOP number and nothing else, etc..
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by 7im »

screen317 wrote:Anyone can now edit my stats page to help:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc ... pY1E#gid=0


Trying to figure out how to add text to the figure legend-- probably missing something obvious.

Changed data range to include column headers, and then edited chart to use the headers as the legend labels.


Please add this link to your original post in this thread so that it is easier to find.

Thanks.
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7im
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by 7im »

Also added 2 data points.

One that I took on 11/15/2011

Another found online, dated 02/29/2008 (GPU was ATI only at that time)

Current Active Total
OS Type TFLOPS* CPUs CPUs
Windows 179 187920 1941669
Mac OS X/PowerPC 8 9435 112622
Mac OS X/Intel 18 5944 40676
Linux 42 24997 275216
GPU 29 484 5193
PLAYSTATIONPS3 918 31337 444803
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k1wi
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by k1wi »

It would be good to add a column with notes, such as when QRB was launched, the launch of the original BA, the point in time where BA was revised etc. Perhaps also a separate sheet for charts (so they don't cover the data).

At this stage, based on the (at this stage) limited historical data (around January 2009 & around January 2012) there ~might~ be a 1PFLOP (and increasing) variation between Northern Hemisphere Winter & Summer. The variation is a lot larger than I expected, but might be a combination between summer temperatures and summer holidays. A third of all active Windows CPUs and a fifth of all active clients stopped folding between Nov 2011 (NH winter) and May 2012 (NH spring). Perhaps there has been a consolidation towards fewer, more powerful clients with total performance dropping. Alternatively, this decrease could be reflecting what may be a large seasonal oscillation.

Looking forward to increasing data points and would love it if PG was able to add some official stats to the party!
7im
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by 7im »

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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by 7im »

k1wi wrote:It would be good to add a column with notes, such as when QRB was launched, the launch of the original BA, the point in time where BA was revised etc. Perhaps also a separate sheet for charts (so they don't cover the data).

At this stage, based on the (at this stage) limited historical data (around January 2009 & around January 2012) there ~might~ be a 1PFLOP (and increasing) variation between Northern Hemisphere Winter & Summer. The variation is a lot larger than I expected, but might be a combination between summer temperatures and summer holidays. A third of all active Windows CPUs and a fifth of all active clients stopped folding between Nov 2011 (NH winter) and May 2012 (NH spring). Perhaps there has been a consolidation towards fewer, more powerful clients with total performance dropping. Alternatively, this decrease could be reflecting what may be a large seasonal oscillation.

Looking forward to increasing data points and would love it if PG was able to add some official stats to the party!

V7 beta started about that same time the drop started. Are we sure that the V7 clients are feeding in to this older stats chart?
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by screen317 »

Thanks!

I've added a link to the first post. I've also moved the chart to its own sheet ("Chart 1" at the bottom of the page). I'll go through the links and add some more data.


Edit: some of these may prove to be problematic:

http://www.afterdawn.com/news/article.c ... lding_home

That article was written on March 24, 2007, but we already have data from that day. I presume that the data was taken from a previous day. How will we estimate that though?



Wonder if PG has official dated stats lying around somewhere..
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by k1wi »

The 11/08/2010 looks like it's a bit of an outlier to me, either because it reresents a day where the stats were off i.e. a server was down, or it wasn't inputted correctly, or it's source is inaccurate... If that outlier is not looked at the graph is looking increasingly osclilating...

[Edit]: Having said that, viewtopic.php?f=16&t=1164&start=165 discusses the decline (as at April 2010 - PFLOPS = "3.5ish"), so maybe it is part of the osclilation... I guess only PG would be able to say whether V7 was the cause 7im.
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by Jesse_V »

7im wrote:V7 beta started about that same time the drop started. Are we sure that the V7 clients are feeding in to this older stats chart?
There was this ticket: https://fah-web.stanford.edu/projects/F ... ticket/585 which I see you reported. I've no idea how much of an effect this had, but I just wanted to point it out.

EDIT: also:

Per http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anton_(computer)&diff=475096764&oldid=457745608
8.8 x86 petaFLOPS on Feb 3, 2012 and 6.4 x86 petaFLOPS on Sept 21, 2011
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by k1wi »

I attempted to add some additional notes to the Chart - namely that the V7 Open Beta was released on 23 March 2011 and the V7 was officially launched 22 March 2012.

Not sure how such notes should be incorporated, but I have added the information in any event!

*Add: also, it might be useful for there to be a link to where the data was sourced from?
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Re: Overall F@H Stats Graph?

Post by 7im »

I recorded these numbers daily for several months in 2007, April 30 through June 28.

How much do you want? Here is a monthly sample... Not sure anything more than that is helpful. :twisted:

Code: Select all

4/30/2007	OS Stats		
OS Type	Current TFLOPS*	Active CPUs	Total CPUs
Windows	184	193002	1682324
Mac OS X/PowerPC	9	10832	98515
Mac OS X/Intel	15	4812	12004
Linux	46	27042	223847
GPU	57	961	2993
PLAYSTATION®3	593	34694	107282
Total	904	271343	2126965


5/30/2007			
OS Type	Current TFLOPS*	Active CPUs	Total CPUs
Windows	186	195246	1713532
Mac OS X/PowerPC	9	11290	100515
Mac OS X/Intel	15	4860	14464
Linux	42	24851	229163
GPU	52	878	3339
PLAYSTATION®3	582	30460	140904
Total	886	267585	2201917


6/28/2007			
OS Type	Current TFLOPS*	Active CPUs	Total CPUs
Windows	178	187323	1736664
Mac OS X/PowerPC	8	10618	101777
Mac OS X/Intel	15	4840	16620
Linux	42	24757	233882
GPU	47	805	3622
PLAYSTATION®3	497	27444	168578
Total	787	255787	2261143
P.S. I charted the data, and in that 3 month period, every client type was in a very slow decline, except for Mac OSX. FAH goes up and down with seasons, clients, economy, technology releases, etc.
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