PS3 upgrade gets a charitable boost
Sony's latest console introduces enhanced features as well as support for Stanford's Folding@home medical research project.
The PS3 update, classified by Sony as version 1.60, is considered a regular system-software upgrade. With the new functions, the console will now support the use of Bluetooth peripherals such as keyboards and mice. In addition, a full QWERTY keyboard will be displayed onscreen as an alternative to the current single-tap keyboard.
The update will also enhance the console's download power, making it possible for PS3 owners to queue up to six downloads at a time from the PlayStation Store. There's also a new menu for "Download Management," so that the progress of current downloads can be easily tracked.
Additionally, the new PS3 software will support Folding@home, a distributed computing project created by Stanford University in 2000 in order to better understand the process of protein folding and how it correlates to serious diseases like Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, and various forms of cancer. Research into protein folding, however, requires an enormous amount of computing power. Similar to the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence's famed
Now, with the Sony software upgrade, PS3 users will be able to donate their unused processor power to the Stanford research project, via the "Network" icon on the Xross Media Bar (XMB) feature.