Comment by wnevets

1 day ago

You're not thinking big enough. Their ultimate goal is gaming (or any computing really) available only in the cloud.

That may or may not be an INTERNAL NVIDIA goal, or even a goal for multiple companies, however, that is NOT how the situation will play out.

The ecosystem isn't closed. TSMC doesn't exist in a vacuum. They may be the most advanced, however, there are a few reasons this will never work:

1) older fabs can be built in a garage by a smart person (it's been done a few times, I'd link the articles, but I don't have them handy)

2) Indie devs exist and often provide better gaming experience than AAA developers.

3) Old hardware/consoles exist, and will continue to exist for many decades to come (my Atari 2600 still works, as an example, and it it is older than I)

Sure, they MAY attempt to grab the market in this way. The attempt will backfire. Companies will go under, including possibly team green if they actually do exit the gaming market (because let's be real, at least in the U.S. a full blown depression is coming. When? No idea. However, yes, it's coming unless folks vote out the garbage.), and the player that doesn't give in, or possibly a chinese player that has yet to enter the market, will take over.

  • > "older fabs can be built in a garage by a smart person"

    Yeah, with 1970s-era feature size. That's fine if your idea of AAA gaming is Hunt The Wumpus or Pong.

  • It's probably not an Nvidia goal no but the publishers want that too. It's the wet dream of copy protection for them. It's easy to record a cloud streamed movie but a game not so much.

Yeah they want a return to TV era where censors curtail content

Everyone will own a presentation layer device. Anyone who can only afford the 1GB model can only get SNES quality visuals.

Snow Crash and Neuromancer have displaced the Bible as cognitive framework for tech rich.

Am working on an app that generates and syncs keys 1:1 over local BT and then syncs them again to home PC (if desired). The idea being cut out internet middle men and go back to something like IRC direct connect, that also requires real world "touch grass" effort to complicate greedy data collectors.

Testing now by sharing IP over Signal and then 1:1'ing over whatever app. Can just scaffold all new protocols on top of TCP/IP again.

  • It’s not really about censorship though, it’s about having control over a rent economy where there is no ownership. It provides maximum profit potential

    • Different entities have different goals but are cooperating in making this happen so they each get what they want. Global corporations get guaranteed income streams from most of the population while governments and ideological groups get control over the flow of communication between people to ensure correct think.

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See, I wrote that out but then I thought, “Nah, that’s too conspiracy for this crowd.” But lo! Yeah. Not excited about the emerging status quo.

I figured this out about 5 years ago. Its why each of my kids and my wife all have decent spec desktop PC's, and half of us use linux (I'll migrate the others later)

Maybe then the year of Linux (or OpenBSD?) on the desktop would finally arrive. Maybe anti-trust could get used. Maybe parts could get scrapped from data centres.

Interesting times they would be!

  • It's already here right now, unironically. There's no need for Windows for gaming now. I just build a new rig with a 7900 XTX and with Steam on Arch Linux everything just works with absolutely no hassle or thinking. This was the only value Windows still had and now that's over.

    • I broadly concur. These days, gaming is usually very easy on Linux.

      Except: If I want to kill some time being chaotic in GTA:V Online, and do that in Linux, then that is forbidden. Single player mode works beautifully, but multiplayer is verboten.

      (And I'm sure that there are other games that similarly feature very deliberate brokenness, but that's my example.)

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    • There are still some pain points with Linux distros: With some, an upgrade can leave you unable to boot into a graphical login screen. This can also happen if you leave a Linux installation, like Manjaro, alone for a year and then do an update.

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  • Linux isn’t much use if you can’t get hold of (non-locked-down) hardware to run it on

    • For now, such hardware is readily available. Every Walmart, for example, will have it. Amazon has it. Pcpartpicker lists numerous other places that you can buy it from.

  • FOSS is more divided than ever, which is an interesting situation given the timing when they should be a solid place for individuals to turn to against the centralization of control. It's quite convenient that so many petty little wars have broken out across the FOSS landscape at just the right time.

Stadia worked, when conditions were good, Geforce Now exists. No cheaters in multiplayer (though there are always new ones), it's a way to go. They're even doing a thing with cellphones as merely devices playing a full screen video stream that you can interact with.