- Joined
- Aug 10, 2007
- Messages
- 4,267 (0.68/day)
- Location
- Sanford, FL, USA
Processor | Intel i5-6600 |
---|---|
Motherboard | ASRock H170M-ITX |
Cooling | Cooler Master Geminii S524 |
Memory | G.Skill DDR4-2133 16GB (8GB x 2) |
Video Card(s) | Gigabyte R9-380X 4GB |
Storage | Samsung 950 EVO 250GB (mSATA) |
Display(s) | LG 29UM69G-B 2560x1080 IPS |
Case | Lian Li PC-Q25 |
Audio Device(s) | Realtek ALC892 |
Power Supply | Seasonic SS-460FL2 |
Mouse | Logitech G700s |
Keyboard | Logitech G110 |
Software | Windows 10 Pro |
Anyone setting up a serious folding machine, or a bunch of them could potentially just grab two quad-core Xeons (the Xeons Fold faster, as they're optimised more for server duties, and FP operations AFAIK), and stick that in a motherboard with like two PCIe slots, stick about 8-16Gigs of RAM, and two HD3k series cards, and have a seriously powerful Folding rig. AMD wouldn't sell their processors for this, but they'd make money off their GPU sales at least.
Does the GPU client have a max instances like the CPU client (16)? The GPU FAQ wasn't too clear on that.
Could get a dual Xeon single-board computer and 19 3850/3870
Probably only get to run one CPU SMP client and leave the other Xeon to handle all the clients.