i personally think yes but it will take some years to fix the problem of most apps not working there.

what do you think?

  • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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    2 hours ago

    From an efficiencies perspective, I really like the idea of high-performance compute being centralized and low-power devices at the edge.

    Essentially going back to the dumb terminal method. Or like BBS’s. Local-ish but consolidated.

    But the idea of pooling all that compute into the hands of a few giant corporations is horrifying.

    I’d much rather have, say, a competitive marketplace of service providers in local datacenters selling a specific service. I.e., I could subscribe to a Moonlight service that some dude sells on a pool of high-performance gaming servers at a colocation data center/carrier hotel (the type of places where businesses rent space and can get really fast connections to internet service providers, because they have their hubs in the same building)

    Essentially the same idea as, say, Xbox Cloud Gaming, or even Google Stadia (it was ahead of its time and honestly shouldn’t have even allowed wireless)…but less closed.

    As a filthy casual, I don’t want the arms race of graphics cards. I don’t want to do 30 minutes of patching to play a game I only have an hour to play. I just want to pick up the controller and go with as little friction as possible.