codygo wrote:There is some confusion over exactly how powerful the ps3 is after their huge marketing hype and anticipated release. After all, the ps3 uses nvidia graphics based on the geforce 7 architecture which is has a big part of the 1.8 teraflops the ps3 claims. A 7 series geforce is claimed to have about 550 gflops, which is really a pie in the sky theoretical number that for desktop and even gaming or professional usage is limited by other bottlenecks or even situations that would actually feed that much information. The next anticipated g92 line of video cards is claimed to have 1 teraflop by itself.
It's a bit like comparing mhz between different cpus, the PC vs cell is comparing floating point strengths of RISC processing vs integer performance of CISC (nowadays CISC has a lot of RISC functionality). RISC computes in many simple tasks requiring the programming to be more extensive, whereas cisc computes fewer complex instructions to do the same task and like almost everything else there are tradeoffs.
I think a good analogy would be to ask, how many "1.0 x1.0" operations can you do in a minute vs how many random questions you can answer in the same minute.
True, but I believe that folding@home is not including the gpu in those stats - I think those numbers are based on empirical data....
Of course different processors handle different sorts of instruction in more or less clock cycles. But given that folding@home is processor intensive as is rendering, and given that the ps3 is burning through folding@home work units - seems like a match made in heaven!
