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Wireless Wednesday Exclusive: Juan Hindo explains the IBM World Community Grid

Rick has an exclusive talk with IBM's Juan Hindo this week. Hindo heads up the very interesting World Community Grid. She explains how you can help in the worldwide fight against pandemiocs.

Have a listen:

The coronavirus pandemic has reminded us all about the power and importance of helping each other. For many people, there seems to be little that they can do to help scientists find medical treatments for coronavirus, or they might be unsure how to get involved in the fight against COVID-19.

Well, that's just changed. Volunteers are now banding together to help scientists seek drug candidates that might help treat COVID-19. The World Community Grid is a project hosted by IBM, where anyone with internet access can now help scientists from the comfort of their own home – no medical degree, time, or money, required.

How does the World Community Grid work? World Community Grid is a free, volunteer-driven resource that crowdsources the surplus power of volunteers' otherwise idle computers, using it to perform virtual experiments. Volunteers download a free and safe app that automatically performs virtual scientific experiments on their computers. When volunteers' devices are otherwise idle, the app crunches numbers for scientists, who are eager for every bit of processing power to run their simulations. Volunteers anywhere in the world can participate by downloading the app onto their desktop, laptop or Android smartphone. It uses the IBM cloud to automatically distribute and collect the computational assignments on volunteers' computers.

The more citizens who volunteer to download the app, the more computer simulations performed, and the more compounds that can be screened in less time. To date, through the World Community Grid, more than 770,000 people and 450 organizations have contributed the equivalent of nearly two million years of computing power to support 30 research projects, including studies on cancer, Ebola, Zika, influenza, muscular dystrophy, malaria and AIDS, as well as projects for developing better water filtration systems and solar energy collection.

Results from World Community Grid projects are shared with the world, and so far more than 50 peer-reviewed scientific articles have been published. Scientists at Japan's Chiba Cancer Center Research Institute and Chiba University used World Community Grid to identify seven promising drug candidates to treat neuroblastoma, one of the most common and dangerous forms of childhood cancer

The World Community Grid project on coronavirus, called "OpenPandemics - COVID19,” was devised by Scripps Research, the largest private, non-profit biomedical research organization in the United States. The project can pivot to screen compounds for future pandemics.

We’re making IBM’s Ms. Juan Hindo available to discuss the World Community Grid project, the potential for the research and how everyone can get involved and join the fight against COVID-19.

Topics:

What is the World Community Grid? How does it work? Why is its mission important (and what need does it fill in the science community)? Who can participate? What types of results for previous projects have been found using this technology? How can listeners get more information?

For more information please visit: worldcommunitygrid.org

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