CATALOG

GERMAN WEBSITES

Domain and Website Information:

boinc.lima-city.de

Deutsche




About site:


Domain name - boinc.lima-city.de


Site title - . . . Lima-City.de BOINC Teamseite . . .


Go to website - . . . Lima-City.de BOINC Teamseite . . .



Words count at boinc.lima-city.de:

boinc - 6
lima - 6
city - 5
team - 4
umgezogen - 2
der - 2
und - 2
ihr - 2
sie - 2
teamseite - 1

See complete list



Site GEO location


Location Country - Germany



Provider - 23M GmbH



boinc.lima-city.de GEO Location on Map



Site Logo



There is no Open Graph data at boinc.lima-city.de


Information for domain boinc.lima-city.de


IP address:

91.216.248.21 91.216.248.20 91.216.248.22


All records:


☆ boinc.lima-city.de. 3600 IN HINFO "RFC8482" ""
☆ boinc.lima-city.de. 3600 IN RRSIG HINFO 13 3 3600 20240705082941 20240703062941 34505 lima-city.de. SQl871OtPSCyCQLnO79quyK2atLB18csRuWXun8zXgoYZ57O41sNg7Lk QwTMVSoj3dPSYMSZ45jmZpE7wKL1Fw==



Whois server information for boinc.lima-city.de

%
% Terms and Conditions of Use
%
% The above data may only be used within the scope of technical or
% administrative necessities of Internet operation or to remedy legal
% problems.
% The use for other purposes, in particular for advertising, is not permitted.
%
% The DENIC whois service on port 43 doesn't disclose any information concerning
% the domain holder, general request and abuse contact.
% This information can be obtained through use of our web-based whois service
% available at the DENIC website:
% http://www.denic.de/en/domains/whois-service/web-whois.html
%
%

Domain: lima-city.de
Nserver: jake.ns.cloudflare.com
Nserver: jill.ns.cloudflare.com
Dnskey: 257 3 13 mdsswUyr3DPW132mOi8V9xESWE8jTo0dxCjjnopKl+GqJxpVXckHAeF+KkxLbxILfDLUT0rAK9iUzy1L53eKGQ==
Status: connect
Changed: 2022-09-14T10:27:55+02:00



Brief facts about boinc:

The Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing is an open-source middleware system for volunteer computing. Developed originally to support SETI@home, it became the platform for many other applications in areas as diverse as medicine, molecular biology, mathematics, linguistics, climatology, environmental science, and astrophysics, among others. The purpose of BOINC is to enable researchers to utilize processing resources of personal computers and other devices around the world. BOINC development began with a group based at the Space Sciences Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley, and led by David P. Anderson, who also led SETI@home. As a high-performance volunteer computing platform, BOINC brings together 34,236 active participants employing 136,341 active computers worldwide, processing daily on average 20.164 PetaFLOPS as of 16 November 2021. The National Science Foundation funds BOINC through awards SCI/0221529, SCI/0438443 and SCI/0721124.

3G Bridge - The Generic Grid-Grid Bridge is an open-source core job bridging component between different grid infrastructures. Its development started in 2008 within the CancerGrid and EDGeS projects. The aim was to create a generic bridge component that can be used in different grid interoperability scenarios.

Africa@home - Africa@home is a website that allow users to use their home computers to contribute for humanitarian causes at Africa. This project first went public on 13 July 2006. It partners with Swiss Tropical Institute, the University of Geneva, CERN, and ICVolunteers.

Citizen Cyberscience Centre - The Citizen Cyberscience Centre is an organization for volunteer computing formed as a partnership between CERN, UNITAR, and the University of Geneva.

distributed.net - Distributed.net is a volunteer computing effort that is attempting to solve large scale problems using otherwise idle CPU or GPU time. It is governed by Distributed Computing Technologies, Incorporated, a non-profit organization under U.S. tax code 501. Distributed.net is working on RC5-72.

Folding@home - Folding@home is a distributed computing project aimed to help scientists develop new therapeutics for a variety of diseases by the means of simulating protein dynamics.

Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search - The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search is a collaborative project of volunteers who use freely available software to search for Mersenne prime numbers. GIMPS was founded in 1996 by George Woltman, who also wrote the Prime95 client and its Linux port MPrime.

Volunteer computing

Science software for Linux

Science software for Windows

Software that uses wxWidgets

Free and open-source Android software

Free science software

Cross-platform free software

 

© DMS 2011-