You are right, however mobile phones are MUCH more numerous - 1/2 billions.
Well, that may mean especially tailored work for mobile phones - smaller molecules, less DNAs... Your opinion? 2009/10/27, [email protected] <[email protected]>: > > Yes, it could. > > That still leaves the problem of too slow to be useful for FPU projects, > which is most of the CPU intensive projects. > > BTW, there was a phone version that was built a few months ago. The main > problem was that NO deadlines for any CPU intensive projects for which the > code was ported could be met, even if the phone were left on the charger > 24/7. > > > jm7 > > > > Eric Myers > <[email protected] > et> To > > [email protected] > 10/27/2009 02:12 cc > PM Petr Hájek <[email protected]>, > > [email protected], > > [email protected] > > Subject > Re: [boinc_dev] BOINC for Mobile > > Phones - please test on your Java > > phone > > > > > > > > > > > > On Tue, 27 Oct 2009, [email protected] wrote: > > > > Everyone I know wears the phone on the belt or carries it in the purse > all > > of the time, and only puts it on charger when it needs to be on the > > charger. > > But it could end up on the charger overnight, which is a long time > to do work. And it would still be ready the next day. > > -Eric > > > > -- S Pozdravem Petr Hájek _______________________________________________ boinc_dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.ssl.berkeley.edu/mailman/listinfo/boinc_dev To unsubscribe, visit the above URL and (near bottom of page) enter your email address.
