![]() If not, install it and add your projects. You should already have installed the BOINC manager. This may prevent other projects (other than ) from running in the BOINC manager.(From my own experience: I've been running it for a week with 0 issues on a Pi that has Pi-Hole, Homebridge, and a number of other apps running.) I offer no guarantees that this is 100% safe for your system it may break something elsewhere on your Pi.I offer no guarantees that this will work for your system. ![]() I found a workaround for this issue here: I'm just re-posting the steps listed there for people to follow.īasically you're putting the Raspbian kernel into 64-bit mode and then re-configuring the BOINC manager to recognize this. Obviously you could pursue other workarounds that require loading a different OS on your Raspberry Pi. No Rosetta tasks are sent to the BOINC manager to work on. The project will display a message in BOINC saying this "project doesn't support arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf" or something similar.If you have the BOINC manager installed on a Raspberry Pi with Raspbian (now called "Raspberry Pi OS") and you add the project, you will likely run into this problem: Normally the work units are focused across medicine, clean energy, and materials science but lately they've been cranking out a lot of COVID-19 research: " With the recent COVID-19 outbreak, has been used to predict the structure of proteins important to the disease as well as to produce new, stable mini-proteins to be used as potential therapeutics and diagnostics." That said if you have a Pi that has some unused CPU bandwidth you might be interested in donating compute power to. I realize running BOINC distributed computing projects on a Raspberry Pi is not particularly exciting for most folks given the ppd values are so low.
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