Einstein@Home on Android Devices

Starting today, Einstein@Home will run on your Android smartphones and tablets. If you own a device running Android 2.3 or higher please sign it up: download BOINC from the Google Play Store and attach to Einstein@Home. Your Android device will help us to find new radio pulsars in data from the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico, the world's largest radio telescope. We'd also be grateful if you could report your "Android experiences" in this forum thread.

Thank you for supporting Einstein@Home!

Bruce Allen
Director, Einstein@Home

Comments

Burch
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Einstein@Home on Android Devices

Any idea what this does to battery life?

Jord
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Work is only done when the

Work is only done when the device is being charged.

As said in the other thread:

Quote:
To preserve battery life, minimize recharge time, and avoid the use of allotted data on cellphone plans, smartphones and tablets running BOINC will only perform calculations when they are being charged, when the battery life is above 90%, and when they are connected to wireless local area networks (WiFi). You can also modify this in the preferences tab of the app.
Claggy
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A hint to keep it cool, when

A hint to keep it cool, when Boinc is crunching leave the device on a large cool metal surface if possible, heat is conducted away amazingly fast, and it'll remain cool to the touch.

Claggy

piticu★
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Installed without a problem

Installed without a problem on Nexus 7 but i have a question: Android E@h runs only on processor? No GPU wu?

Ryan
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Cellphone isn't usually has

Cellphone isn't usually has edge with right angle, so some soft but nice contact material can transfer the hear much faster.

Go Einstein@home.

rajvo
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Hi! What about Mali-T604 in

Hi!
What about Mali-T604 in Nexus 10? It supports OpenCL, but BOINC app didn't use it for work. Why?..

Bernd Machenschalk
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RE: What about Mali-T604 in

Quote:
What about Mali-T604 in Nexus 10? It supports OpenCL, but BOINC app didn't use it for work. Why?..

Does it officially?

AFAIK (e.g. from here) the drivers installed on the device are unofficial and thus don't necessarily support all OpenCL features.

Has this changed in any way?

BM

BM

Bruce Allen
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RE: Installed without a

Quote:
Installed without a problem on Nexus 7 but i have a question: Android E@h runs only on processor? No GPU wu?

In the future we hope to support the GPUs on Android devices. But this may be some time in coming, as typically the device vendors do not support either CUDA or OpenCL on their GPUs.

Director, Einstein@Home

piticu★
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That will be nice. It will

That will be nice.
It will also be nice if you guys start colaborating with parallella guys too. Their processor looks very promising http://www.parallella.org/board/

Mike Hewson
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RE: That will be nice. It

Quote:
That will be nice.
It will also be nice if you guys start colaborating with parallella guys too. Their processor looks very promising http://www.parallella.org/board/


Got it covered. See here, where I report my assessments of exactly that .... and having fun !! :-) :-)

Cheers, Mike.

I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...

... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal

Jord
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RE: RE: Installed without

Quote:
Quote:
Installed without a problem on Nexus 7 but i have a question: Android E@h runs only on processor? No GPU wu?

In the future we hope to support the GPUs on Android devices. But this may be some time in coming, as typically the device vendors do not support either CUDA or OpenCL on their GPUs.


The Tegra 4 in a Nexus 7 does not support OpenCL (or CUDA for that matter, one needs the new Tegra 5, to be released in 2014 for that).

At the moment, there are phones and tablets available with Android GPUs that support OpenCL: http://e7dev.blogspot.nl/2013/07/android-opencl-gpu.html (Already sent to Rom).

COMP
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Why not supported Xbox and

Why not supported Xbox and PS3 consoles?

Bikeman (Heinz-Bernd Eggenstein)
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RE: Why not supported Xbox

Quote:
Why not supported Xbox and PS3 consoles?

For much the same reason that we do not support iOS: license issues and rather closed systems.

There had been some Distributed Computing activities on the PS3: until recently (a couple of months ago IIRC), Folding@Home was part of the Software pre- installed on the PS3, but this was not using BOINC. It was based on an individual agreement between Sony and the F@H project.

Both XBOX and PS3 are rather closed software ecosystems today.

PS3 used to support booting a Linux system, and several people used (and continue to use) BOINC under Linux on PS3s, but that multi-boot-option was removed by a Sony software update. The number of PS3s that still can boot Linux and run BOINC on it is not big enough to justify the effort of providing an official science app for it. But the BRP4 and GW-search code is Open Source...

There are hopes that the new PS4 will a) have a marketplace that is more open to independent software developers and b) be more Unix like so porting BOINC would be straight forward. We will see.

Cheers
HB

Bikeman (Heinz-Bernd Eggenstein)
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One additional note: BOINC

One additional note:

BOINC on Android is also available for the Kindle HD tablet, from Amazon's app market.

Customers in geographical areas covered by Amazon.com can go here:

http://amzn.com/B00DCCGLAG ,

otherwise visit your local Amazon site and search for "BOINC".

Cheers
HB

NuLLnVoiD
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I just started to see info

I just started to see info about BOINC on Android in the blogs and on Google+ yesterday (7-24-2013). I used to have Folding @ Home running on my PS3 until an update killed it. When I saw that my shiny new phone could be part of these exciting projects, I had to jump in. I'm hoping that more of the projects available to PC will become available for my Android phone as well. Right now, it's only a few projects but I'm still happy to help.

skgiven
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Will the Xbox One be any use

Will the Xbox One be any use for crunching? It supposedly uses ATI's GCN and is DirectX 11.2 compatible,

"Microsoft Xbox One is based on AMD Fusion custom-designed system-on-chip with eight x86 low-power/low-cost Jaguar cores, AMD Radeon HD graphics with GCN architecture (with 32MB ESRAM/EDRAM buffer) as well as 8GB of DDR3 system memory." - xbitlabs

I see that a Peak+ phone with Firefox OS 1.1 will be being released in Sept. with a dual-core Cortex-A5 at 1.2GHz, Adreno 203 GPU,
http://www.gsmarena.com/geeksphone_peak_with_1gb_ram_goes_on_preorder_for__euro150-news-6460.php

chuckbens
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Wierd issue on new task on my

Wierd issue on new task on my Android phone. It's a Galaxy Note running android 4.0.4 OS.

Task - p2030.20121022.G194.41-02.68.S.b30g0.00000_939_1

I noticed it always seemed to be running, but the % was always at 0.0%. I watched it for awhile and noticed that it would run for 3:00 minutes and then reset to 0:00 minutes. It has probably been doing this for days. I aborted that task and will probably hold off on anymore until I have more time to watch them.

FYI,
Chuck

ExtraTerrestrial Apes
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Any performance results

Any performance results yet?

MrS

Scanning for our furry friends since Jan 2002

Bikeman (Heinz-Bernd Eggenstein)
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RE: Wierd issue on new task

Quote:

Wierd issue on new task on my Android phone. It's a Galaxy Note running android 4.0.4 OS.

Task - p2030.20121022.G194.41-02.68.S.b30g0.00000_939_1

I noticed it always seemed to be running, but the % was always at 0.0%. I watched it for awhile and noticed that it would run for 3:00 minutes and then reset to 0:00 minutes. It has probably been doing this for days. I aborted that task and will probably hold off on anymore until I have more time to watch them.

FYI,
Chuck

We have a known issue on some phones where this can happen if the setting "Use xxx % of CPU time" is set to anything less than 100%.

Cheers
HB

Alex
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RE: Any performance results

Bikeman (Heinz-Bernd Eggenstein)
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RE: Will the Xbox One be

Quote:
Will the Xbox One be any use for crunching? It supposedly uses ATI's GCN and is DirectX 11.2 compatible,

From a hardware point of view, the XBOX One , and the PS4, will be good crunchers. Traditionally console ecosystem are quite closed, but this may change a bit with the next generation. Microsoft will announce come details about how independent software developers (those not associated with the big game publishing companies) will be able to write software for the XBOX at Gamescon in August.

Cheers
HB

Dan
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I installed Boinc on my cell

I installed Boinc on my cell phone - sony xperia x10 wih android 2.3.3. For the past 3 days now it has been waiting for a task to begin crunching. It does not want to download anything to start working. Any help would be appreciated.
Dan

Claggy
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RE: I installed Boinc on my

Quote:
I installed Boinc on my cell phone - sony xperia x10 wih android 2.3.3. For the past 3 days now it has been waiting for a task to begin crunching. It does not want to download anything to start working. Any help would be appreciated.
Dan


You don't have enough RAM available:

http://einstein.phys.uwm.edu/host_sched_logs/8245/8245613

Quote:
2013-07-26 17:45:58.4956 [PID=31122] Request: [USER#xxxxx] [HOST#8245613] [IP xxx.xxx.xxx.22] client 7.2.7
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5009 [PID=31122] [send] effective_ncpus 1 max_jobs_on_host_cpu 999999 max_jobs_on_host 999999
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5009 [PID=31122] [send] effective_ngpus 0 max_jobs_on_host_gpu 999999
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5009 [PID=31122] [send] Not using matchmaker scheduling; Not using EDF sim
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5009 [PID=31122] [send] CPU: req 51840.00 sec, 1.00 instances; est delay 0.00
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5009 [PID=31122] [send] work_req_seconds: 51840.00 secs
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5009 [PID=31122] [send] available disk 0.18 GB, work_buf_min 8640
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5009 [PID=31122] [send] active_frac 0.994356 on_frac 0.991880 DCF 1.000000
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5014 [PID=31122] [send] [HOST#8245613] is reliable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5015 [PID=31122] [send] set_trust: error rate 0.100000 > 0.050000, don't trust
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5135 [PID=31122] [version] no app version available: APP#21 (hsgamma_FGRP2) PLATFORM#12 (arm-android-linux-gnu) min_version 0
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5136 [PID=31122] [version] no app version available: APP#23 (einsteinbinary_BRP5) PLATFORM#12 (arm-android-linux-gnu) min_version 0
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5137 [PID=31122] [version] Checking plan class 'NEON'
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5141 [PID=31122] [version] reading plan classes from file '/BOINC/projects/EinsteinAtHome/plan_class_spec.xml'
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5142 [PID=31122] [version] plan class ok
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5142 [PID=31122] [version] Checking plan class 'VFP'
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5142 [PID=31122] [version] plan class ok
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5142 [PID=31122] [version] Best version of app einsteinbinary_BRP4 is ID 470 (0.17 GFLOPS)
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5142 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171414786 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_1476] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5142 [PID=31122] [send] [HOST#8245613] [WU#171414786 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_1476] WU is infeasible: Not enough memory
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5143 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171415650 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_1893] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5145 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171414910 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_1537] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5146 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171419688 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_3336] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5147 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171413879 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_1028] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5148 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171418224 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_2860] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5150 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171417019 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_2472] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5151 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171417019 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_2472] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5152 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171413255 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_731] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5153 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171416782 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_2395] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5155 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171418985 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_3107] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5156 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171415133 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_1648] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5157 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171417890 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_2749] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5159 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171413840 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_1009] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5160 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171388701 p2030.20121022.G194.41-02.68.C.b1s0g0.00000_1041] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5161 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171417234 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_2538] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5162 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171309405 p2030.20121022.G194.41-02.68.N.b3s0g0.00000_2065] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5164 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171416664 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_2358] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5165 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171415741 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_1937] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5166 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171412862 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_537] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5167 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171387465 p2030.20121022.G194.41-02.68.C.b1s0g0.00000_630] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5168 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#169239362 p2030.20130408.G36.17-01.35.N.b4s0g0.00000_2069] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5170 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171417412 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_2594] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5171 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171419138 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_3157] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5172 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171419409 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_3245] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5173 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171419647 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_3323] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5175 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171413459 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_829] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5176 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171416484 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_2299] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5177 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#169239802 p2030.20130408.G36.17-01.35.N.b4s0g0.00000_2289] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5179 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171419749 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_3355] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5180 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171417886 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_2748] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5181 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171412054 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b2s0g0.00000_144] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5182 [PID=31122] [send] [WU#171412966 p2030.20121022.G194.28-02.91.S.b0s0g0.00000_589] needs 247.96MB RAM; [HOST#8245613] has 280.01MB, 196.01MB usable
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5183 [PID=31122] [send] stopping work search - insufficient memory
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5183 [PID=31122] [send] stopping work search - insufficient memory

2013-07-26 17:45:58.5202 [PID=31122] [debug] [HOST#8245613] MSG(high) No work sent
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5203 [PID=31122] [debug] [HOST#8245613] MSG(high) Gamma-ray pulsar search #2 is not available for your type of computer.
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5203 [PID=31122] [debug] [HOST#8245613] MSG(high) Binary Radio Pulsar Search (Perseus Arm Survey) is not available for your type of computer.
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5203 [PID=31122] [debug] [HOST#8245613] MSG(high) see scheduler log messages on http://einstein.phys.uwm.edu//host_sched_logs/8245/8245613
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5203 [PID=31122] [debug] [HOST#8245613] MSG(high) Binary Radio Pulsar Search (Arecibo) needs 247.96 MB RAM but only 196.01 MB is available for use.
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5203 [PID=31122] Sending reply to [HOST#8245613]: 0 results, delay req 60.00
2013-07-26 17:45:58.5206 [PID=31122] Scheduler ran 0.031 seconds

Try a different project, like Asteroids@home, RAM use isn't so critical there (at least until the requirements are lowered). (Older Android mobiles have a limited amount of RAM, and of storage)

Claggy

ExtraTerrestrial Apes
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RE: Google Nexus 7

Quote:
Google Nexus 7 http://einsteinathome.org/host/8006949/tasks ~88 credits/day per core
Asus EEPad http://einsteinathome.org/host/8007085/tasks ~88 credits/day per core, but quite a few taking significantly longer
Hardkernel ODROID http://einsteinathome.org/host/8007044/tasks ~163 credits/day per core
HTC Desire X http://einsteinathome.org/host/8007164/tasks ~71 credits/day per core

Thanks for the numbers! I don't know how many cores these devices have and how many tasks the people run. And current ARM CPUs are not exactly know for good memory controllers & bandwidth.. which Einstein does need. So I can imagine "performance per core" to drop significantly as more cores are loaded. On the other hand I could see people running on fewer than all cores in order not to overheat their devices. Changing the amount of parallel tasks may be what happened to that EEPad, where performance variied from 60ks to 80ks per WU.

Anyway.. these numbers should help to put things iinto perspective.

MrS

Scanning for our furry friends since Jan 2002

Alex
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RE: I don't know how many

Quote:
I don't know how many cores these devices have and how many tasks the people run.

Nexus 7: 3/4 cores assigned to Boinc, mix of Einstein, Pogs and MW
Asus EEPad: 3/4 cores, same mix
HTC: 1/2 cores, same mix
Hardkernel: 4/4 cores, overclocked to 2 GHz, watercooled, Einstein, Pogs

Beyond
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RAC: 4899075

RE: Google Nexus 7


Does it really make sense to (quite likely) destroy our Android phones and tablets for this kind of abysmal performance? This is very poor performance even compared to a 7 year old low end laptop. Of course people are free to fry their Andriod devices if they choose, but at least offer a clear warning message with a "yes I understand" click box. Of course the phone makers will love this initiative as they'll sell a lot of replacements. Maybe they can make a special BOINC phone with a 120mm fan for cooling ;-).

Alex
Alex
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RE: Does it really make

Quote:

Does it really make sense to (quite likely) destroy our Android phones and tablets for this kind of abysmal performance? This is very poor performance even compared to a 7 year old low end laptop. Of course people are free to fry their Andriod devices if they choose, but at least offer a clear warning message with a "yes I understand" click box. Of course the phone makers will love this initiative as they'll sell a lot of replacements. Maybe they can make a special BOINC phone with a 120mm fan for cooling ;-).

120mm fan? LOL, no idea, look here:
This is my main android device in original (Odroid U2):
hardkernel.com
And this is how it works here:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/50246791/Odroid%20watercooled%201.jpg
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/50246791/Odroid%20watercooled%202.jpg
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/50246791/Odroid%20watercooled%203.jpg
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/50246791/odroid%20watercooled%204.jpg
:-)))

To be honest: in terms of performance you are right. But compare the power consumption: This device is overclocked to 4x2GHz and draws 1.8Amp @ 5V. Can any old style PC or laptop compare in any way?
This is the performance @ MW: http://milkyway.cs.rpi.edu/milkyway/show_host_detail.php?hostid=525266
This @ pogs: http://pogs.theskynet.org/pogs/show_host_detail.php?hostid=7962
This is a 50:50 mix of Pogs and MW.
I'll post actual Einstein performance in 3 or 4 days when I switch back to Einstein.

Another point: the technique is very young and in steady developement, device prices drop and performance raises, and someone needs to start with it. And remember the first days of SETI 12 years ago; I counted the dayly credits in tens, not kilo credits. Would you say it was senseless to do it? Let's give it a chance!

And to be correct: Higher temps decrease the lifetime of any electronic device.
And to be a little bit more correct: use chargers with lower charging current to keep the batt temp lower.

Always look at the bright side of live,

Cheers
Alexander

Stranger7777
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RE: RE: Google Nexus 7

Quote:

Does it really make sense to (quite likely) destroy our Android phones and tablets for this kind of abysmal performance?.


I agree with your opinion twice, because I have one more argument - old machines are already produced and these days they are free of charge because nobody need them.
But the other side of this is that there are alredy millions of Android devices (fortunatelly not one of mine) ready to produce dozens of digits sand by sand. And this potentially can overcome even NVidia GPUs in the nearest future.
But to put it in run you have to buy a new Android device first thus supporting chinese industry working on filling the garbage mountains with a new highly technological materials.

Alex
Alex
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RE: But to put it in run

Quote:

But to put it in run you have to buy a new Android device first thus supporting chinese industry working on filling the garbage mountains with a new highly technological materials.

Not necessarily; the only one I bought for crunching only is the Odroid, which comes from south Korea. The other devices have dedicated work to do beside BOINC and would be on duty anyway.

And another thing: how many of us cruchers bought hi-end gpu's just only for crunching? Is your argument applyable to android devices only?

Alex
Alex
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RE: Does it really make

Quote:

Does it really make sense to (quite likely) destroy our Android phones and tablets for this kind of abysmal performance? This is very poor performance even compared to a 7 year old low end laptop.

Beyond, pls understand that I really do not want to bother anyone, I do not have things like that in my mind. I am technician in the professional AV-branche and used to calculate with pure numbers. My native language is german and I use englisch in most cases to read technical manuals. This is why it is a bit bumpy.

Can you pls clarify what you mean with 'abysmal performance' ?

I checked the 'High score table' at pogs, sorted by RAC.
Here are two of my devices:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/50246791/eepad%20performance%20at%20pogs.PNG
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/50246791/odroid%20performance%20at%20pogs.PNG

Both devices run a mix of apps and not all the time, so optimizing for one project might give better numbers. In case of the Odroid (the second one) it could be 4 times better.

DC itself is a innovative idea, more or less in a beta state. Not long ago a guy at pogs posted to have reached the 2 mio credit mark running 5 Odroids. Also there is a group running Linux on their Odroids, they ask for a arm linux app there. And following the thread from Mike Hewson regarding the Kickstarter project we see another developement which possibly might have poor performance at the beginning. But does that mean not to try it?
Try and error is one way of evolution.
So porting your and Stranger7777's arguments to all of these projects, would that avoid the progress in DC?

Speaking for myself: I give it a try!

Alex

Mike Hewson
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Re Parallella : the

Re Parallella : the architecture is highly optimized for signal processing, but fortunately also for low power at ~ 600mW per core at typical loads ( including board support here, though I hear that may scale down to around 25 - 50mW per core with denser chipsets ). The kits now available are only at evaluation level. At 64 cores ( the current densest chip ) it might just start to be worth using for, say, FFT. That is still a long way from an E@H work unit. Really Parallella ought be viewed as a coprocessor component within another system, and not just for now but even if you do scale up to 4096 cores. Presently it requires an ARM dual core CPU, 1GB RAM and a minimal FPGA allocation to host it at all. On the up side that runs Ubuntu, but I can't honestly say how truly anyone intends to put a JVM ( or Dalvik look-alike ) on it! Plus about the only thing that isn't open about Parallella is the IP license ....

Cheers, Mike.

I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...

... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal

Alex
Alex
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RE: That is still a long

Quote:
That is still a long way from an E@H work unit.

And it all begun with an Raspberry Pi, much enthusiasm and an open mind for new ideas! Things like that brighten up my day.

Alex

Mike Hewson
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RE: RE: That is still a

Quote:
Quote:
That is still a long way from an E@H work unit.

And it all begun with an Raspberry Pi, much enthusiasm and an open mind for new ideas! Things like that brighten up my day.


It's entirely possible that the successor(s) of the current Parallella implementations will do E@H. But that evidently will depend upon the commercial success and progress of the Adapteva guys ....

FWIW my rough/wild guess is that once you get to 256 cores ( 16 x 16 ) on a chip and sufficient per-core memory ( 1MB is addressable by design but only 32KB physically present now ) say 256KB/core then one can put serious slabs of data onto the array. After some setup, then ideally you want a single largest write into the chip, do some parallel magic, followed by a single largest read out ( + rinse/lather/repeat ).

BTW - there is a sub-group of the Parallella backers that is looking at porting Android to it.

Cheers, Mike.

I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...

... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal

Stranger7777
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RE: And another thing: how

Quote:
And another thing: how many of us cruchers bought hi-end gpu's just only for crunching? Is your argument applyable to android devices only?

1) Not so many, I guess. But I'm the one who did like this. I bought my 560GTX and 640GT only for crunch. Firstly I wanted to have a possibility to play World of Tanks, but later I found that I haven't enough time for this and now my cards crunch Einstein ~100% of time, because Intel GPU can't work right now due to bug in drivers.
2) My Android is 2.2.1 and is not able to crunch and I tend to use it for about 5-7 years more, so you're right twice :)

BUT

Quote:
So porting your and Stranger7777's arguments to all of these projects, would that avoid the progress in DC?


Sometimes it already is. We are throwing out rather old machines instead of optimising applications to use their potential. But they are already produced and have complex CISC processors with lot of programming features (like coprocessor etc) tested for a long time and all their bugs are known. But instead of this we put efforts on a new RISC-processors having
lower stability, uknown yet bugs, and not almost the same productivity and stability.
I agree that these devices have lower power consumption per core and
more productivity per Watt. But again, those old machines are already bought,
but these new a lot of us have to buy. And BOINC is yet another argument for a potential buyer/cruncher to change ones old Android to a new one, throwing out even more Earth-resources.

This is like to change a car spending about $100k for this just for fuel economy. You have to use this car without any repairs for about 50 to 100 years to make fuel economy overcome the cost of the car. In any other way you threw excess money and car factory thew invaluable but not infinite Earth resources to the wind.

Instead of this, it is better to repair an old car even if it cosumes more fuel (just use original and quality parts).

There is a good animation movie illustrating this. It is named WALLY. Just look at it. Sure, you'll like it.

The only argument I see for the Android is that there are dozens of such devices already produced and bought that have enough power (Android 2.3 or higher, memory more than 270 MBytes free) to crunch significant part of the project's work. Let's see.

P.S. I'm a developer and programmer for an accounting system for shops and supermarkets. And I optimised my app so I can put back in work even Pentium-100 machine. My consumers don't have to buy new machines, they can use their old ones. My competitors can't do this. So this is the economy effect.

Alex
Alex
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RE: 2) My Android is 2.2.1

Quote:

2) My Android is 2.2.1 and is not able to crunch and I tend to use it for about 5-7 years more, so you're right twice :)

I do have such a device too, my old, outdated POV Mobii.
http://milkyway.cs.rpi.edu/milkyway/show_host_detail.php?hostid=523949

Does not work with official Boinc but works with native Boinc, is attached to Milkyway and works fine. Has not enough memory for other projects. May help to keep your device usable.

Stranger7777
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RE: May help to keep your

Quote:
May help to keep your device usable.


Thank a lot. That's great that rather old machines can be BOINCed somehow. But I'm using it for calls for about 16 hours a day (tech support by phone). There is no time when it is charged over 90%, at least 50-60%.

ExtraTerrestrial Apes
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RE: To be honest: in terms

Quote:
To be honest: in terms of performance you are right. But compare the power consumption: This device is overclocked to 4x2GHz and draws 1.8Amp @ 5V. Can any old style PC or laptop compare in any way?


Let's see: you're drawing 9 W at the wall for 163 credits/day per core, resulting in an optimal daily throughput of 652 credits.

My HD4000 at 1350 MHz @ ~1.00 V does about 8.8k RAC. When I suspend Einstein@iGPU and BOINC starts nothing else power draw at the wall is reduced by ~20 W, give or take a bit. This is using a voltage offset of -0.11 V, i.e. it's more power-optimized than regular HD4000's, but 1350 MHz is not exactly the most power efficient setup either (in mobile chips the GPU can go below 0.5 V!).

Using these numbers your ARM Quad would be 6 times less power efficient. That's unfair, though, as I'm comparing system power draw at the wall versus just the iGPU power at the wall. And an idle PC can add significantly to the total power budget.. however, modern laptops can idle below 10 W, whereas desktops reach 30 - 40 W. Such system power consumption would become almost negligible if more powerful GPUs would be used.

I'm sure comparisons with current AMD or nVidia GPUs wouldn't put the ARM in any better light, since these are pretty power efficient too. There's not even cost in favor of the ARM, as you'd need 13.5 of them to match even the relatively low-performance HD4000.

And here's the reason why I think we shouldn't expect miracles from these CPUs, nto even long-term: they're CPUs, not GPUs! You could push them for higher performance by including larger SIMD units feds by small and power efficient cores.. but ultimately you'd just end up creating something similar as Intels Knight's Corner / Larrabee. Or you dumb the cores down a bit further and you'd end up creating GPUs.

Personally I don't think it makes all that much sense to invest time & effort into developing for BOINC@ARM now, especially since most of these CPUs are put into devices which are normally not plugged into the wall all the time (and you really really shouldn't crunch on battery). However, if you do have the time and ressources anyway.. well, we've got to start at some point, as Alex said.

MrS

Scanning for our furry friends since Jan 2002

Stranger7777
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Bernd, is it possible to add

Bernd, is it possible to add the statistics for Android devices to the status page as it was done for Intel GPUs?

Alex
Alex
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RE: Let's see: you're

Quote:


Let's see: you're drawing 9 W at the wall for 163 credits/day per core, resulting in an optimal daily throughput of 652 credits.

Hi MrS,

I agree, high-end GPU's are much more efficient than cpu's or arm's, no doubt. But the comparison was not made by me, the post says This is very poor performance even compared to a 7 year old low end laptop.
And the post contained a link to my arm devices. So I took the best one of these 4 devices and checked how relevant this comparison is.
As you posted, my device draws ~ 9 watts at full load and a modern laptop can idle below 10 watts; older style laptops draw more, be shure. And how much do they draw during crunching?

Next thing is comparing the performance.
Einstein is not the best project for that; statistics end at 10000 and the hosts there have a RAC that we will not see in the near future from any arm device (nor from a 7 years old low end laptop).
So I have choosen Milkyway for testing. The wu's validate against nVidia and AMD gpu's and, of course, against cpu's, Linux, Windows, and whatever is crunching there. So this is very similar to Einstein.
But the project is smaller and the chance to see these devices in the top computers list is higher.

On monday evening I set up my host to crunch MW only, 4 cores, 7/24. The RAC has reached 856.83 now, expecting to reach a value of ~2400 in 11 days (about one wu finished per hour giving 106 credits each).
After 3 days of crunching the device is listed as 8227 out of 35504 hosts with recent credit.

This is well within the top 25% of hosts there, after 3 days of crunching for the project. With an estimated RAC of 2400 the device will be in the top 15% of the hosts. Would be fair to take a 7 yr old low end laptop and
post the performance at MW here so that everyone can compare for himself.

Another argument was: But instead of this we put efforts on a new RISC-processors having lower stability, uknown yet bugs, and not almost the same productivity and stability
Hmm, let's see: valid 44, invalid 0, error 0.
http://milkyway.cs.rpi.edu/milkyway/results.php?hostid=525266

I do not do this to attack anyone, but people have a picture in their mind showing arm as low end and not worth to invest time and effort into these devices. I do this just simply to correct this picture.

BTW,
1. Hardkernel has announced a new board with the Exynos5 Octa processor, containing 4 A15 cores + 4 A7 cores and OpenCL conform.
2. I wonder why noone has ever tried to use sat-receivers to run boinc; many of these devices run some form of linux, there are many of them out there and plugged in 7/24. X-Box yes, sat-Receiver no?
3. More and more devices are on the market having Android operating system, for example media players and possibly soon even TV's. Let's see if someeone hacks them and uses these devices (without batteries!) to crunch. As posted somewhere else: the amount of the devices is what makes them useful.

I'm happy that you agreee well, we've got to start at some point

Alex

Daniel Carrion
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People need to get out of

People need to get out of this rut of not justifying ARM devices and check where this architecture is heading in terms of the server and datacenter.

Alex, Cheers for the heads up on the HardKernel Exynos5. Getting one of these puppies to try the OpenCL 1.1 EP compatibility of their GPUs. Although it's the embedded profile as opposed to full, it's worth giving it a shot!

ExtraTerrestrial Apes
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Hi Alex, I didn't mention

Hi Alex,

I didn't mention the comparison to that "7 year old low end laptop" because I think it doesn't make all that much sense to crunch on these either. Their energy efficiency as a platform may be OK (since they're laptops), but serious crunching will kill them in a matter of months to years. They're old, have probably dusted cooling vents and were not made for crunching. Even if the CPU is cooled well the mainboard gets a lot hotter than usual.. and is one of the first to fail in a laptop. I think there are surely better uses for these devices. And anything prior to Core 1 architecture is far too energy inefficient today.

Regarding Milkyway: do you run nbody or separation tasks? If it's separation: well.. even at 2400 RAC the comparison pales when looking at GPUs. Badly.. but this is true for any CPU doing separation tasks. I poushed my "old" HD6950 quite hard.. unlocked shaders and OC beyond HD6970 clocks, but keeping stock HD6950 voltage. I achieved ~260k RAC at an estimated power consumption of 150 W for the GPU, 300 W for the entire PC crunching 8 CPU tasks. 280 W after switching from Sandy to Ivy.

Granted that was a very efficient setup for MW and is probably above average, even now that we've got 28 nm GPUs. But if even only the top 100 crunchers used one GPU of this caliber, you'd need 10000 of your ARMs to match that performance!

It's a different story if you're running nbody tasks. I never cared about these, because I'd rather spend my CPU cycles for medical projects or Einstein, but here the ARM performance may be more impressive.

And about that comment about lacking stability.. I have no idea where this is comming from. Such a problem is certainly conceivable.. but I'd rather go with the hard numbers here.

Anyway, the future of ARM CPUs will be interesting. "Much you still have to learn my young Padawan".. but the progress is very dynamic!

MrS

Scanning for our furry friends since Jan 2002

Alex
Alex
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I've finished Odroid

I've finished Odroid crunching at MW. After one week the device has reached a RAC of 1173.75 https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/50246791/Odroid%20MW%20performance%201.PNG which brings the device into the top 20% hosts.

I've done this to make it clear that arm does not stand for lowest performance but for a wide range of products and ongoing development.
An overview can be found here: http://www.arm.com/products/processors/index.php

Mali-T622 also supports OpenCL Full Profile and includes double-precision FP64 and full IEEE-754-2008 floating-point support which are essential features in order to enhance the user experience
Curious? An overview about Mali (GPU) development can be found here: http://www.arm.com/products/multimedia/mali-graphics-plus-gpu-compute/

Devices to use: It can not be posted often enough: do NOT run your device on charger 7/24. 'Batteries' (in reality these batteries are accumulators) need discharge/charge cycles to stay alive. But what to do with these mobile devices when battery is weak, face is scratched or whatever else? If the battery is already weak then you cannot do anything wrong to run it in a dock or on charger 7/24. You still can use your device as alarm clock, weather station, news feed receiver aso and, of course, as crunching device. There is no need to dispose them.
And, of course, there is a group of freaks, taking every device that has some form of crunching capability and attach them to DC. It started here with the Raspberry Pi. And as posted somewhere here, some of them are on duty.
But there are development boards available. The one I use is the Odroid U2, a 4 core A9 device with neon http://www.arm.com/products/processors/technologies/neon.php.
Next generation, the Odroid XU offers a processor with big.LITTLE concept, giving 4 A15 cores and 4 A7 cores, all of them with Neon. And a Mali GPU with OpenCL support, but only the limited 'Mobile' profile. hardkernel.com.
@ Bernd: can this device possibly run the Einstein OpenCL app?

Another idea:
The Message 124322 http://einsteinathome.org/node/196560&nowrap=true#124511 contains the phrase I can see a challenge for volunteers here..
So why not a challenge to port DC to devices like sat-receivers, tvs aso that are already in the field, running some form of Linux and soon Android? A challenge for teams for best implementation? And for organizing the challenge.

But as said earlier: we have to start somewhere.

Alex

Stranger7777
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RE: So why not a challenge

Quote:
So why not a challenge to port DC to devices like sat-receivers, tvs aso that are already in the field, running some form of Linux and soon Android? A challenge for teams for best implementation?


Linux is not the argument for the device to start writing apps for it. The main reason is that these devices made up on very different chips thus having a very different architecture (both for ram and for CPU itself). I guess most of them have a C++ compiler, but... even these days we can and often do find bugs even in Intel Standard compiler that as said conforms to some calculation standards. Nothing to say for these new devices. The support for such devices can be made only if the project programmer will study for a new to program the devices from the scratch (even from the asm) to avoid such bugs (that can be in Linux kernel, compiler itself, processor core or in OpenCL-supporting libraries). So the only devices that can be succesfully supported are those that are reported officialy to fully conform to math-standards used in certain project. But most of devices (TVs, receivers and enginering devices like yours) instead have their own architecture and reduced Linux ports that don't conform to almost any standard thus having uknown and untested functionality.
And again, no new device can save your enough money with their energy economy to return the cost of such a device. But a rather old machine can help you to reach the same productivity and save you while that a $100-$200.
P.S. I have a lot of machines produced even in 2000. And they are well even this days crunching all this time for DC (firstly for S@H, then for E@H). Just look after them and they will crunch good for you.

Beyond
Beyond
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RE: I didn't mention the

Quote:
I didn't mention the comparison to that "7 year old low end laptop" because I think it doesn't make all that much sense to crunch on these either. Their energy efficiency as a platform may be OK (since they're laptops), but serious crunching will kill them in a matter of months to years. They're old, have probably dusted cooling vents and were not made for crunching. Even if the CPU is cooled well the mainboard gets a lot hotter than usual.. and is one of the first to fail in a laptop.


Hi MrS, I have a Lenovo Core 2 Duo T5500 laptop thats been running DC at 100% since November, 2006: almost 7 years. So far no repairs and it still works perfectly. It's running RMClock to lower the voltage and keep it cooler and uses 24 watts at 100% CPU usage. The first couple years it was on PrimeGrid and found 64 new primes, many of which made the Titan 5000 list at the time. Now it's running Correlizer and Yoyo muon. Not as fast as a newer desktop but still not bad bang for the buck. My neighbor has an HP AMD X2 based laptop that's been going strong for about 5 years at 100% DC usage, also running RMClock. Just did the first repair on that one (replaced a failing hard drive). Too bad though that RMClock hasn't been updated for the newer processors.

Stranger7777
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RE: ...(replaced a failing

Quote:
...(replaced a failing hard drive)


And that drive even with the cost of replacement is much cheaper than a whole new PC. This is the benefit.

Stranger7777
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I'll try to ask my question

I'll try to ask my question for the second time, just to understand whether it is possible or not:
Is it possible to add an "Avg daily credit (Android)" to the status page?
This way we all will be able to see the productivity of such devices.

Bikeman (Heinz-Bernd Eggenstein)
Bikeman (Heinz-...
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RE: I'll try to ask my

Quote:
I'll try to ask my question for the second time, just to understand whether it is possible or not:
Is it possible to add an "Avg daily credit (Android)" to the status page?
This way we all will be able to see the productivity of such devices.

Hi!

I'm not sure that is really useful at this moment, the server status page is already quite crowded anyway. For me personally, the CPU cycles from Android devices are just as welcome as the CPU cycles from any other platform, no matter what their share in the overall statistics are (in terms of credits, I would estimate ca 140k credits per day go to Android hosts atm.). The more important effect to me is that we reached out to many new volunteers who were not involved in volunteer distributed computing before. Tablets and similar devices will play an ever increasing role in households in the near future, and rather than wait for things to happen and then follow the development, we like to be a bit ahead of such trends and experiment with new stuff while it's hot.

Cheers
HB

Stranger7777
Stranger7777
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RE: Tablets and similar

Quote:
Tablets and similar devices will play an ever increasing role in households in the near future, and rather than wait for things to happen and then follow the development, we like to be a bit ahead of such trends and experiment with new stuff while it's hot.


And that's why it will be very-very interesting and highly appreciated to see how many such devices are involved already and will be involved in future, how much income do they bring in such contribution. Avg daily credit is an interesting activity ratio indicator. So I persistantly ask to implement at least one of those indicators mentioned above :)

Bernd Machenschalk
Bernd Machenschalk
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You can get this info at

You can get this info at stats sites, e.g. BOINCStats Host OS Breakdown and look for "Android".

BM

BM

Stranger7777
Stranger7777
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RE: You can get this info

Quote:
You can get this info at stats sites, e.g. BOINCStats Host OS Breakdown and look for "Android".
BM


I just don't want to dig through those numbers ;) Everything in one place (page) is much better and it is great to look at the status page everyday :)