What is BOINCdashboard?
BOINCdashboard is a web-based statistics dashboard for BOINC (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing) — the open-source platform that lets volunteers donate computing power to scientific research projects worldwide.
The dashboard tracks who is actively contributing compute credits across major BOINC projects, showing daily credit production, historical trends, and competitive leaderboards. If you're not actively crunching in the selected time window, you don't appear — this site focuses on active participants keeping the BOINC hobby alive.
Tracked BOINC Projects
BOINCdashboard currently tracks credit statistics, user leaderboards, and team rankings for the following BOINC projects:
Each project is broken down by subproject where applicable, so you can see credit trends for specific computational tasks within each project.
Dashboard Features
How It Works
BOINCdashboard collects daily credit data from BOINC project servers using automated scrapers. Data is processed, stored, and served as a lightweight JSON-powered dashboard that loads fast and runs entirely in the browser. The dashboard updates once per day with the latest credit figures.
Users are identified by their BOINC Cross-Project ID (CPID) to handle username changes and special characters reliably. Team rankings aggregate member contributions across all tracked subprojects.
Who Is This For?
BOINCdashboard is built for BOINC volunteers, competitive crunchers, and anyone curious about distributed computing activity. Whether you want to track your own progress, scout the competition, or explore which projects are most active, the dashboard gives you a clear picture of who's contributing and how much.
→ Open BOINCdashboardAbout BOINC
BOINC (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing) is an open-source volunteer computing platform originally developed at UC Berkeley. It allows anyone to donate their computer's idle processing power to scientific research projects ranging from prime number searches (PrimeGrid) to particle physics simulations (LHC@Home) to astronomical modeling (Milkyway@home). Millions of volunteers worldwide participate in BOINC projects, collectively forming one of the largest distributed computing networks on the planet.