Hey, if Google manages to convince developers to adopt Linux and Vulkan en masse, I'm all for it.
even if the experience is identical in quality to the best of a local setup, I can't get behind a platform that removes my control over my library
This was my takeaway as well.Hey, if Google manages to convince developers to adopt Linux and Vulkan en masse, I'm all for it.
To me the limiting factor has been the data center distance and reliability of my connection, especially during peak hours.You are all seriously underestimating Cloud Gaming.
If Google Stadia works like Shadow.tech, then you could enjoy Cloud Gaming with a 25 Mbps bandwith.
If DOOM Eternal ends up being exclusive to the Bethesda launcher I will use Stadia to play it
So Stadia is pretty much what everybody thought it was, right?
But what if more than one person is using your internet connection at home? Or worse, two people streaming games.
I expected more, to be honest. Like a box.So Stadia is pretty much what everybody thought it was, right?
Not really, with Shadow you are renting high performance PC and using your own library of games and still have full control over them.
Yup, unless they lobby hard for the next government to restore the net neutrality in the US, or they aggresively install Google Fiber everywhere, this thing is dead on the water.Better hope you don't play too many hours if you have a cap.
25mbp/s, if I'm not doing my math wrong, is 10GB per hour (3MB X 60 X 60).
If you have Comcast, and both people average 2 hours a day, that's 120 hours a month. Or 1.2TB. You're already over your cap by 200GB and that doesn't include a single other usage for bandwidth.
It's crazy to hear people still having data caps
that shit has been gone from home internet in my country for like..12 years at least.
It's crazy to hear people still having data caps
that shit has been gone from home internet in my country for like..12 years at least.
North American big telecomms are cartels that no one seems to want to crack down on in any meaningful way, thus the situation we're in.It's crazy to hear people still having data caps
that shit has been gone from home internet in my country for like..12 years at least.
Because the concept is similar except Shadow is you renting a cloud PC while Google will likely bake in some games along with their sub fee
This is stupid, I know what both are
It's crazy to hear people still having data caps
that shit has been gone from home internet in my country for like..12 years at least.
I tried the alpha and I loved it.trust me, you don't want to touch it until its baked at least for a bit - whats there is still very early.
Patreon couldn't survive charging all creators just a 5 percent rake on the monthly subscriptions they earn from fans while building commerce tools like CRMs and merchandise to try to stay ahead of Twitch, YouTube and Google. But it also didn't want to screw all its loyal early creators.
So today, Patreon is overhauling its pricing. Any creator can still get a 5 percent rate, but just for a Lite version without bonus tools or different fan tiers. All of Patreon's extra features will now be in the Pro plan, with an 8 percent rate, but with existing creators grandfathered in at 5 percent. And the new Premium enterprise plan for 12 percent (9 percent for existing creators) will offer full-service merchandise sales, multi-user team accounts and dedicated customer support.
If you want the lower grandfathered rates, you'll need to join Patreon in the next few weeks before the new rates go into effect in early May.
I understand valve, cuz they just don't care for being seen heard, but epic too? That is shockingSadly it seems neither Valve nor Epic Store will be streamed and no recording either.
I guess, press might report on important things.
Sadly it seems neither Valve nor Epic Store will be streamed and no recording either.
I guess, press might report on important things.
I think Alden said theirs will be in the GDC vault, but who knows when that's up.Sadly it seems neither Valve nor Epic Store will be streamed and no recording either.
I guess, press might report on important things.