Researchers prepare work units
Folding@home projects are broken into defined work units: small pieces of a larger computational study that can be processed by many machines in parallel.
OUR PROCESS • DONATED HARDWARE • FOLDING@HOME
Compute4Cure uses Folding@home technology to receive researcher-prepared work units, process them on donated computers, and return completed results to the network.
Our job is practical: collect useful hardware, keep it stable, and turn idle processing power into verified scientific work.
Folding@home projects are broken into defined work units: small pieces of a larger computational study that can be processed by many machines in parallel.
We accept donated computers and components, configure them for reliable operation, and run them under Compute4Cure’s Folding@home team so their output is tracked together.
Each machine receives work from Folding@home, uses its CPU or GPU to process the unit, and continues running new units as long as the system remains available.
When a unit finishes, Folding@home receives and validates the result. Those completed units become part of the larger research dataset for the project.
One computer helps. Many computers running over time create meaningful throughput: more completed work units, more donated computer-hours, and more capacity for open science.
Folding@home is the distributed computing technology Compute4Cure uses. Visit their site if you want to learn more about the platform, client, and research network behind the work units.
Donate useful computers or components and help turn idle compute into completed Folding@home work units.