I used some service back in 2016-2017 that would basically give you a stream of a desktop PC, with your own personal persistent storage on it. Personally, the only two issues I had with Stadia was 1.) Google's history and 2.) having to buy games as if it's a new console, rather than just being able to launch all your existing PC games as if you were playing them on another PC. Even trusting a platform with a well-established history is still setting yourself up for being unable to cope with any unexpected price hikes that might sneak up on you later on. But blindly putting your faith into any single service and not having any exit plan for if/when it shuts down is a great way to set yourself up for disappointment. That's how interconnected cloud tech is with our day to day.Ĭloud based services can be great when you're not locked into a specific one. It wasn't even a day and it cost an economic impact close to a billion dollars. It's that big of a deal that it immediately became an AP story. On the subject of AWS and head spinning, folks really need to recall what happened the day it actually went down and just how many companies were impacted by that. Fact is nobody trusted Google because Google was so out of touch with what their gaming consumers wanted. Amazon, Microsoft, and now Sony are showing that hey it can be done on the gaming end. So please to anyone reading, don't let Google's failure be an indictment on the tech overall and especially for gaming. It's use is as normal as the sky is blue. Some people just don't know how normalized the cloud is or even the difference between gaming on the cloud and on the enterprise end.
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