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OnLive - On Demand Games (Good quality/new releases etc) Options
Cyanbane
Posted: Tuesday, March 24, 2009 7:15:55 AM


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Just saw this. Sounds like a lot of hype, but if they succeed might be interesting..

Quote:
“This is video gaming on demand, where we deliver the games as a service, not something on a disk or in hardware,” Perlman said. “Hardware is no longer the defining factor of the game experience.”


I totally agree with the quote... to a point.

Wondering what you guys think:


New OnLive service could turn the video game world upside down
Dardore
Posted: Tuesday, March 24, 2009 7:22:43 AM


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Gotta have the hardcopy of the game personally. Particularly in bandwidth "tethered" situations.
Cyanbane
Posted: Wednesday, March 25, 2009 10:44:46 AM


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Sam Houston just posted a pick from GDC of someone playing Crysis via OnLine:

http://twitpic.com/2fmdn

thats pretty damn impressive. I tweeted him to see how fast that connection is. Will let you know if he answers me.

Still very impressive.
Cyanbane
Posted: Thursday, March 26, 2009 10:40:33 AM


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Quote:
Not only will these datacenters be handling the gameplay, they will also be encoding the video output of the machines in real time and piping it down over IP to you at 1.5MBps (for SD) and 5MBps (for HD). OnLive says you will be getting 60fps gameplay. First of all, bear in mind that YouTube's encoding farms take a long, long time to produce their current, offline 2MBps 30fps HD video. OnLive is going to be doing it all in real-time via a PC plug-in card, at 5MBps, and with surround sound too.

It sounds brilliant, but there's one rather annoying fact to consider: the nature of video compression is such that the longer the CPU has to encode the video, the better the job it will do. Conversely, it's a matter of fact that the lower the latency, the less efficient it can be.

More than that, OnLive overlord Steve Perlmen has said that the latency introduced by the encoder is 1ms. Think about that; he's saying that the OnLive encoder runs at 1000fps. It's one of the most astonishing claims I've ever heard. It's like Ford saying that the new Fiesta's cruising speed is in excess of the speed of sound. To give some idea of the kind of leap OnLive reckons it is delivering, I consulted one of the world's leading specialists in high-end video encoding, and his response to OnLive's claims included such gems as "Bulls***" and "Hahahahaha!" along with a more measured, "I have the feeling that somebody is not telling the entire story here." This is a man whose know-how has helped YouTube make the jump to HD, and whose software is used in video compression applications around the world.



GREAT read on the technical hurdles that OnLive faces:

GDC: Why OnLive Can't Possibly Work
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