Air Force may suffer collateral damage from PS3 firmware update
Genius on the AirForce's part. Not so much by Sony.
~Lordbob
Source: Air Force may suffer collateral damage from PS3 firmware updateWhen Sony issued a recent PlayStation 3 update removing the device's ability to install alternate operating systems like Linux, it did so to protect copyrighted content—but several research projects suffered collateral damage. The Air Force is one example. The Air Force Research Laboratory in Rome, New York picked up 336 PS3 systems in 2009 and built itself a 53 teraFLOP processing cluster. Once completed as a proof of concept, Air Force researchers then scaled up by a factor of six and went in search of 2,200 more consoles (later scaled back to 1,700). The $663,000 contract was awarded on January 6, 2010, to a small company called Fixstars that could provide 1,700 160GB PS3 systems to the government.
Getting that many units was difficult enough that the government required bidders to get a letter from Sony certifying that the units were actually available.
Genius on the AirForce's part. Not so much by Sony.
~Lordbob
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 Ultimate x64, Mint 9Intel i5-2500k2x 4Gb Corsair VENGEANCE DDR3-1600NVidia GeForce N260GTX Twin Frozr
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Hera
- OS
- Windows 7 Ultimate x64, Mint 9
- CPU
- Intel i5-2500k
- Motherboard
- ASUS P8P67 Pro
- Memory
- 2x 4Gb Corsair VENGEANCE DDR3-1600
- Graphics Card(s)
- NVidia GeForce N260GTX Twin Frozr
- Sound Card
- Realtek HD OnBoard Audio
- Monitor(s) Displays
- ASUS 24" Monitor
- Screen Resolution
- 1920x1080
- Hard Drives
- G.SKILL Phoenix Series 60GB SATA II MLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD)
SAMSUNG Spinpoint F3R 1TB 7200 RPM 32MB Cache SATA II
- PSU
- Cooler Master Real Power Pro 750W
- Case
- Cooler Master Haf 932
- Cooling
- Fans
- Keyboard
- Razer Tarantula
- Mouse
- Razer Lachesis
- Internet Speed
- not fast enough