cvv
Arcane
The "Try Now" button doesn't work.
https://www.blog.google/products/stadia/try-stadia-free-today/We’re facing some of the most challenging times in recent memory. Keeping social distance is vital, but staying home for long periods can be difficult and feel isolating. Video games can be a valuable way to socialize with friends and family when you’re stuck at home, so we’re giving gamers in 14 countries free access to Stadia Pro for two months.
Anyone who signs up will get two free months of Stadia Pro with instant access to nine games, including GRID, Destiny 2: The Collection, and Thumper. You can purchase even more games on the store, which will remain yours to play even if you cancel your Stadia Pro subscription. If you’re already a paid Stadia Pro subscriber, we won’t charge you for the next two months.
Wrong.going to go out on a limb and guess you lose access to the games you ""bought""(rented) after your subscription expires, right?
The "Try Now" button doesn't work.
Who are you kidding, everyone would try it if it's free.The "Try Now" button doesn't work.
You outed yourself as someone who wanted to try now.
Suicide is free, why don't you try it?Who are you kidding, everyone would try it if it's free.
The same shit any other corporation will do,throw it away.I wonder what Google will do with all of the excess graphics cards from this experiment. They can probably re-purpose the other components into their cloud offering.
Farm crypto, obviously. Greedy fucks gonna greed.The same shit any other corporation will do,throw it away.I wonder what Google will do with all of the excess graphics cards from this experiment. They can probably re-purpose the other components into their cloud offering.
LoL too much work for some corporate suit. Tho the IT department could do it easelly,just plug that shit in the basement and fill your pockets.Farm crypto, obviously. Greedy fucks gonna greed.The same shit any other corporation will do,throw it away.I wonder what Google will do with all of the excess graphics cards from this experiment. They can probably re-purpose the other components into their cloud offering.
Calling up IT and saying: "Farm crypto guys" is too much work?too much work for some corporate suit
It's cute that you think the IT department would be involved with that at a tech company.Calling up IT and saying: "Farm crypto guys" is too much work?too much work for some corporate suit
https://www.blog.google/products/stadia/try-stadia-free-today/We’re facing some of the most challenging times in recent memory. Keeping social distance is vital, but staying home for long periods can be difficult and feel isolating. Video games can be a valuable way to socialize with friends and family when you’re stuck at home, so we’re giving gamers in 14 countries free access to Stadia Pro for two months.
Anyone who signs up will get two free months of Stadia Pro with instant access to nine games, including GRID, Destiny 2: The Collection, and Thumper. You can purchase even more games on the store, which will remain yours to play even if you cancel your Stadia Pro subscription. If you’re already a paid Stadia Pro subscriber, we won’t charge you for the next two months.
Actually, basic *physical* RTT is going to be worse with fiber than with copper, fiber's main advantage is MASSIVELY improved bandwidth (which might factor into RTT with actual packets).Tele-gaming has been tried repeatedly for well over a decade now and has always failed, primarily due to latency, quality loss, and the immense amount of bandwidth required—both throughput and total.
Even under optimal conditions (fiber-optic cable all the way, cutting-edge remote servers, direct wired connection to the end user's modem, and close proximity to the data center), the round-trip delay time becomes substantial.
I could see a sort-of cloud becoming relevant to gaming, but it would definitely not be a cloud in today's meaning of the word. Locality is important where latency matters.In short, "cloud" gaming is a non-starter of a hoax, not dissimilar to solar roads and communism.
Tele-gaming has been tried repeatedly for well over a decade now and has always failed, primarily due to latency, quality loss, and the immense amount of bandwidth required—both throughput and total.
Even under optimal conditions (fiber-optic cable all the way, cutting-edge remote servers, direct wired connection to the end user's modem, and close proximity to the data center), the round-trip delay time becomes substantial.
Yes. Imagine blaming your failure on a commercial opportunity.Look on the bright side. Google can scapegoat Stadia's failure on the china virus and the bandwidth restrictions companies have been self-imposing.