No bro, my dude. The companies told me all these constant waves going every where is fine, it's like not a problem at all. It doesn't give you cancer or damage your cells or anything! Like bro it's fine!
Normies will reject cloud shit because they want to be MLG pro types even when they're scrubs. The other issue is that launch events would be worst than any MMO ever. Imagine having a million people wanting to play your game and having to render and stream all that at once. MMO servers can't even deal with that many people logging on let alone running the client and host side.
Gavin Kelly
Wrong.
Julian Torres
cringe and butthurt
Thomas Gomez
Google will just become Microsoft 2 until another company comes along and replaces them just as MS did with IBM in the first place. Nothing new under the sun. As for cloud services, that will never ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever (ever) happen in America due to data caps. Even the most retarded ultranormie cuck consumers will not blow tons of money going over their data cap. And this problem is going to get far, far, far worse as Net Neutrality dies so you have to pay extra to get functional, let alone high-speed, internet.
The only time it could work is if the ISP offers it directly. But the ISP already does this with normal phone services (landlines, voice, text), so literally who cares because in that case Ma Bell is rebuilt and simply gouges the fuck out of everyone to the point where normies adopt meshnets so they don't have to pay $50 to watch a 30 min TV show.
The Internet is not free, it is a paid service. As a result of this, streaming services are unlikely to go mainstream unless a total telecom monopoly happens (which I'll admit is plausible, but it'll be AT&T not Google, and the monopoly will also drive the net itself into the ground in a way not even normies will fully accept).
Carson Hughes
People said the same thing about radio, TV, airplane ATC, your microwave and even railroad signalling. All of it is bunk. There's nothing wrong with wireless, only if it's proprietary.
Kayden Richardson
It'll be a battle of oligopolies between network and cloud providers, until one of them swallows the other, accumulates enough political power to socialize the other or until some disruptive technology comes along to fuck them both. It'll all fizzle out in the end and only nerds will remember it in a few decades. That's what always happens.
Oliver Edwards
In the end Ma Bell lives. Any company that has to use the Internet (including Amazon) is totally beholden to ISPs of which AT&T is the largest. Until now they've always counted on ISPs being completely fair and only charging for bulk data transfers, without having to worry about competing against the ISP itself. Now that NN is gone, this is no longer the case. Why should AT&T allow Google to have free webmail? They can charge a special fee for that and require Google's webmail use AT&T emails for user authentication. There is no law stopping them, and the few voices in the government against it can be quickly silenced through screeching about Russian hackers.
There is no way any software company can plausibly compete with hardware companies now. The latter can just lock out the former, who will have no option but to accept it unless they can raise the money to construct their own hardware. Google already gave up on this when their investors chose bigger Dividends instead.