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Now Google Might Make a Game Console and Game-Streaming Service (fastcompany.com)

Google could try to get serious about gaming with a rumored console and game-streaming service, according to the Information. From a report: The service, codenamed "Yeti," would stream modern games over the internet instead of processing them on locally, allowing them to run weaker hardware such as Google's Chromecast dongles. Several other companies, including Nvidia and Sony, already offer their own game-streaming services, but the problems are always the same: Publishers tend to support these services halfheartedly or not at all, and even with an excellent internet connection, the experience isn't as responsive or dependable as a powerful home console. It's unclear how Google might solve those problems, but the company is reportedly considering a holiday 2017 launch.

90 comments

  1. Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google Delenda Est.

    I hope it fails horribly.

  2. Good luck! by jbmartin6 · · Score: 4, Funny

    the company is reportedly considering a holiday 2017 launch

    Simply amazing, not only is Google just re-doing what others have already done, they are trying to go back in time and do it at the same time!

    --
    This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
    1. Re:Good luck! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amazing what those folks over at Google can do. I hear that their **** doesn't stink too. (just ask them)

    2. Re:Good luck! by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Funny

      They're just going to use the Google Time Machine. The only problem is that they haven't totally worked out the bugs just yet.

      "Ok, Google. Take me ten years back."

      "Taking you to the Triassic."

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    3. Re:Good luck! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wonder where they got their flux capacitors...

    4. Re:Good luck! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They're just going to use the Google Time Machine.

      You know, that's a novel solution to latency ...

    5. Re:Good luck! by russotto · · Score: 2

      Prior art is to be found in "Thiotimoline to the Stars".

    6. Re:Good luck! by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

      What's worse is they're going to be going head on with the Dreamcast 2.

      --
      Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    7. Re:Good luck! by snookiex · · Score: 1

      I just hope they don't discontinue the service while I'm still in the past.

      --
      Open Source Network Inventory for the masses! Kuwaiba
    8. Re: Good luck! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why is that a bad thing? The dreamcast was an excellent console and way ahead of its time. It even came with a god damn modem.

    9. Re:Good luck! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but it'll be in beta for EONS. In other words, business as usual for Google...

    10. Re: Good luck! by Nidi62 · · Score: 3, Funny

      The date selection doesn't work, you can only use the "I'm feeling lucky" button

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    11. Re:Good luck! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The project is codenamed Superluminal and the commercial name of the console will be takyon.

    12. Re:Good luck! by pslytely+psycho · · Score: 1

      O'Reilly Auto Parts.

      https://www.oreillyauto.com/flux-capacitor

      --
      Donald Trump, on a crusade to make Nixon look respectable
  3. what about building out an fiber network so by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    what about building out an fiber network so we can use this gaming system with out hitting our cap

    1. Re:what about building out an fiber network so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they tried that then realised their wasn't sufficient profit in it for them.

    2. Re:what about building out an fiber network so by sit1963nz · · Score: 1

      They struck a small snag. They used Google and found 96% of the worlds population does NOT live in the USA. I mean who knew...am I right...

    3. Re:what about building out an fiber network so by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      Most of the world's population does indeed not live in the USA, which means decent network speeds without caps. (I'm talking about countries which can afford prices on this -- there's not much money Google can earn in sub-Saharan Africa.)

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    4. Re:what about building out an fiber network so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Century Link is offering 1 Gbps for $75/month. (But they seem to change offers so much I'm not sure if it will always be available.)

  4. Holiday 2017 launch? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "...but the company is reportedly considering a holiday 2017 launch."

    I'd say they failed to make the holiday 2017 launch.

    1. Re:Holiday 2017 launch? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It launched yesterday. The first game was "Gran Turismo - Tesla In Space" or "I'm going to make the most expensive car commercial ever".

  5. Ugh.... more Seattle traffic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Almost all streaming and all console development experience is in Seattle... Of course whether they get an experienced team or just bang their heads till garbage comes out like most of their hardware, it is still not going to compete well. It would be better to team up with valve and polish up their streaming systems.

  6. Fix Chromecast by Luthair · · Score: 2

    Maybe fix chromecast first, its become increasingly buggy across all your products.

  7. onlive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OnLive tried this and failed

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OnLive

    1. Re:onlive by mattventura · · Score: 1

      PS Now or whatever it’s called also doesn’t seem to be too popular either. What I would love is a multi platform game streaming service. I’d rent or buy a console game if I could play it in the cloud, but there aren’t enough exclusives I’m interested in on any one console to justify buying the console itself. Onlive IIRC only did PC games, and PS Now only has a very limited selection of games. If there was a service that had all the games - hell, even a service where I could purchase the game and send it to them - I’d sign up for it.

    2. Re:onlive by supremebob · · Score: 1

      Yeah, my crummy VDSL based Internet connection is barely reliable enough to play multiplayer PC and XBox games where the graphics processing is done locally. I can only imagine how glitchy it would be if you offloaded the rendering to the cloud. I'll pass, thanks.

  8. doubtful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google is just not that good at this kind of stuff. All their consumer product efforts like Nexus and Pixel are tiny niche efforts that never amount to much.

  9. It's not the game companies that will half-ass it by bigdady92 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Google itself will rocket through development like an adderall fueled college developer mainlining 4 loko's (blue raspberry old school of course) roll it out with maybe 60% of it done, get a few publisher's on board with sweet deals and throw tons of money at them, and users login for their Beta (it's always BETA) service.

    Then the adrenaline haze wears off, Google actually has to support clients, wrangle in contracts from publisher's to put more games on the system, figure out how to get around bandwidth caps that your lovely ISP's enforce on you, roll out development updates while slashing the team and budget until 18 months later Google walks away for the next OOOHHH SHINEY! thing and we are left with a stillborn service that makes the Phantom console look like Steve Jobs christened it from Heaven.

    Points of Reference:
    Gmail
    Hangouts
    G+
    Whatever their Photo Service is
    Google Glasses
    ChromeOS
    etc
    etc
    etc

    --
    Wheel of Time: Book by Book and Sumview (summary review) Bigdady92 style: http://bigdady92.blogspot.com/
  10. Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean sure NVIDIA has had Android TV based SHIELD TV doing the same things since 2015. But if Google thinks they can do better in an area that has been shown to have lackluster customer interest, then by all means.

    nvGuy

    1. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I actually like the Nvidia cloud streaming, it worked far better than not (QTE were a bit of a problem). The biggest problem was they don't rotate games as part of the included games.

  11. until they don't by Hugh+Jorgen · · Score: 0

    And screw the consumer once again ... F google, alphabet wtf it is now. Go back to search, it's your bread and butter and enough with the distractors and detractors.

  12. Is it a good market? by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

    Nintendo is in there because that's their whole deal, Sony and MS felt kind of luke warm about even getting around to replacing 360 and PS3, but would probably keep their platforms going so long as it breaks even for brand exposure or something. NVidia and Steam have hardware no one buys, too, right? I guess they could make sure to price it so it isn't a loss leader for peripherals and then also claim it mines bitcoins or something.

    1. Re:Is it a good market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It could just be some relatively low-end hardware that also plays games. It'd probably need to come with a controller for anyone to bother using it, though.

      Apple started upmarketing their Apple TV, which now costs $180. Apparently, no one plays games on it (https://www.fastcompany.com/40457373/where-did-apple-tv-games-go-wrong) and it hasn't translated to fantastic sales (http://www.parksassociates.com/blog/article/pr-08232017).

      For some reason, Rokus are the best selling Smart TV add-on. I don't know if this is because they have cheap basic devices, or if it because certain brands of smart TVs come with them pre-installed.

    2. Re:Is it a good market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever used a Steam controller? The touchpad surface on its d-pad is even worse to use than the trackpoint on old IBM Thinkpads. No wonder they're not selling hardware.

  13. Ouya 2.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google can't change the fact that Android is dominated by crappy IAP games. Unless is can bribe companies to bring AAA games to it then it will be another Ouya.

  14. Re:It's not the game companies that will half-ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google Wave

  15. Google is well set on ruling our lives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    from cradle to grave.
    Stop now before it is too late. Say no to everything from Google.

  16. Re:It's not the game companies that will half-ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shh, you got copies of their business plans? I really do think this company has peeked,

  17. Not for long they won't by IWantMoreSpamPlease · · Score: 1

    They'll lauch it half finished, apply some healf hearted updates that half fix half the bugs, and promptly lose interest in the whole shebang simply because it didn't set the world on fire instantly.

    --
    So rise up, all ye lost ones, as one, we'll claw the clouds.
  18. How that will turn out... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's crap! "Oh well it's beta. Tough shit."

    It's great! "We're discontinuing this project. Tough shit."

  19. No. by DogDude · · Score: 1

    1. Google doesn't need any more of my information. They have enough.
    2. Google is notorious for suddenly dropping projects for reasons known only to them.
    3. At least in the US, we don't have great Internet connections in many, many places. Certainly not consistent enough to play bandwidth intensive games.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
  20. Uhm, noooooooooo by dstyle5 · · Score: 1

    "..perhaps the company has noticed the enthusiasm around Nvidia’s Shield TV set-top box.."

    I have approximately zero friends and coworkers with one of these or any interest it getting one. People I know who want to game do it on a PC, PS4, XBO or Switch. Or a combination of them. Yes its anecdotal, but I have yet to see any first hand "enthusiasm" for this product. Given how cheap the XBox One and PS4 got over the holidays last year who in their right mind would buy a Shield for gaming. Does not compute...

    1. Re:Uhm, noooooooooo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I have approximately zero friends

      Me too buddy. Me too.

    2. Re:Uhm, noooooooooo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I have one and love mine. After I got it, at least two of my coworkers also bought one and love it. It's awesome even just as a set top box. The fact that I can play cheap versions of games I no longer have consoles for is awesome too (emulators and games like GTA Vice City that were remastered for Android).

  21. Re:It's not the game companies that will half-ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It is not that the adrenaline wears off.

    At google, the only way to get promoted, and get higher pay, is to Launch a product/feature/...
    The entire engineering ladder and the whole promo cycle is fully focused on launches and launches only.

    This has the effect that once a product/feature is launched then the most ambitious engineers simply move to another team to work on whatever will lead to their next promo.
    Launch, Promo, Abandon is what we used to jokingly describe the engineering ladder internally.

    This is why you see the products developed the way they are. There is simply no good reason for an engineer to work on incrementally improving a product.
    It is in fact counterproductive since it means your career is going down a dead end with no chance for promo.

  22. Variant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Couldn't they offer to develop something like "Open Game Streaming" with everyone?

    Then cooperatively shoulder local CDN-like Game-Streaming Data centers for everyone's Game streaming needs?

  23. Skyrim port by DarkRookie · · Score: 1

    Do we really need another machine with a Skyrim port on it.
    How many times has that been ported now?

    --
    The millennial that doesn't like most of the stuff designed for millennials.
    1. Re:Skyrim port by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do we really need another machine with a Skyrim port on it.

      Yes.

      How many times has that been ported now?

      Who cares?

      It's one of the few games you can completely ignore the plot and the storyline, and play it however you see fit.

      I basically refuse to advance any quests, and just endlessly goldfarm and explore.

    2. Re:Skyrim port by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > and just endlessly pay for redundant copies

  24. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  25. Past experience with "streaming" games by keith_nt4 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I read a little about "streaming" games around 2010...I think it was called "onLive", something like that. I was actually living in a house with a fiber optic connection. Probably one of the few places in the whole of north america with a low latency connection that could of worked with the streaming service.

    I never signed up for it though to even try. From what I could tell at the time you had to actually "purchase" a game at the full price of $60 which was non-transferable and non-refundable. In other words if the service was down for maintenance or went out of business the developer would keep my $60 and would have nothing to show for it. No physical disk, no license key, nothing. Didn't sound like such a great to me.

    I only told that anecdote to engage in uninformed speculation: google has something of a history of adopting an existing thing but putting some new twist on it. When gmail came out for instance it was unique in it's 'unlimited" email space which was a departure at the time from yahoo/hotmail/etc. And when they got started in the MVNO business they adopted multiple networks (with Google FI). And I don't think there was anything quite like an OS revolving around a web browser so thoroughly before ChromeOS came out.

    So to engage in a little uniformed speculation I would expect some similar twist on a "gaming service" they released. I think game streaming makes sense on some level. I know they have data centers for miles and miles. And it wouldn't surprise me if some amount of them sat idle for some percentage of time. And it could be used to advertise their services against competitor services (Azure and Amazon's cloud for instance). They would have their own twist on it though. Maybe it would be a $10/month unlimited thing. Maybe it would mainly focus on android games. Or maybe it would lean more towards a "limited device set" like Google Fi and there would just be a set of "google game streaming compatible" devices in TVs and certain tablets.

    How the latency/compression thing would be resolved I have no idea. Unless they just focused on more turned based/slow moving stuff more akin to civilization games.

    --
    "UNIX is very simple, it just needs a genius to understand its simplicity." -Dennis Ritchie
    1. Re:Past experience with "streaming" games by harryk · · Score: 1

      It wasn't so much that they failed, they were bought out (Sony I think?) and the product itself worked well. I was part of the beta, continuing with them when they went live, and bought a handful of games through them. Fortunately, they were running various promos and I never paid full price (though admittedly, I did lose all that content when they closed). I understood the risks with the service, and the only problem I ever found with their service was in the racing games, in those cases the latency and input lag did not work well enough for the responsiveness required for racing. The shooters all responded really well and since everyone was faced with same or similar lag, it worked really well. Strategy or the few tower defense games, played very well.

      Personally, I'm sold on the tech, but I won't get involved with a service like this again unless I can transfer my purchases out. I might (though I didn't previously) subscribe to a $10/mo service for the entire library of whatever's offered, but unlikely.

      my 2 cents...

      harryk

      --
      think before you write, it'll save me moderator points.
  26. Re:Retro fad gone to far in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Creimertard. Mod down.

  27. Re:It's not the game companies that will half-ass by shess · · Score: 1

    Google itself will rocket through development like an adderall fueled college developer mainlining 4 loko's (blue raspberry old school of course) roll it out with maybe 60% of it done, get a few publisher's on board with sweet deals and throw tons of money at them, and users login for their Beta (it's always BETA) service.

    Then the adrenaline haze wears off, Google actually has to support clients, wrangle in contracts from publisher's to put more games on the system, figure out how to get around bandwidth caps that your lovely ISP's enforce on you, roll out development updates while slashing the team and budget until 18 months later Google walks away for the next OOOHHH SHINEY! thing and we are left with a stillborn service that makes the Phantom console look like Steve Jobs christened it from Heaven.

    You forgot to mention that the next "OOOHHH SHINEY" thing will be a video game console capable of streaming. It just won't share any APIs or code or anything with the current one.

    That said ... I'm honestly not sure I see the point of this. If you remove the battery and screen from an Android device, what you're left with is maybe $50 worth of stuff. Add controllers (or allow phones as controllers) and it feels like streaming is irrelevant.

  28. Re: Retro fad gone to far in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Me thinks he ate em.

    Think football player.

  29. beta by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's the problem with shipping beta...

  30. Re:Retro fad gone to far in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Team Creimer, I believe you can get me through the night

    Exactly, Team Creimer wants to believe and says no to naysayers.

  31. Re:It's not the game companies that will half-ass by bobstreo · · Score: 1

    Google itself will rocket through development like an adderall fueled college developer mainlining 4 loko's (blue raspberry old school of course) roll it out with maybe 60% of it done, get a few publisher's on board with sweet deals and throw tons of money at them, and users login for their Beta (it's always BETA) service.

    Then the adrenaline haze wears off, Google actually has to support clients, wrangle in contracts from publisher's to put more games on the system, figure out how to get around bandwidth caps that your lovely ISP's enforce on you, roll out development updates while slashing the team and budget until 18 months later Google walks away for the next OOOHHH SHINEY! thing and we are left with a stillborn service that makes the Phantom console look like Steve Jobs christened it from Heaven.

    Points of Reference:
    Gmail
    Hangouts
    G+
    Whatever their Photo Service is
    Google Glasses
    ChromeOS
    etc
    etc
    etc

    This^^^^^^^^^ Totally this.

    I'm pretty much done buying any hardware google produces.

    If there was an option to lease/rent for a year or two until support is dropped, and I can just send it back or throw it away, and stop paying, I'd almost be OK with that. Almost.

  32. Halfhearted support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Publishers tend to support these services halfheartedly or not at all,

    And given Google's track record - who in his right mind would expect a different outcome??????

  33. Nice by nospam007 · · Score: 3, Funny

    "The service, codenamed "Yeti,"

    It will be abominable I suppose.

  34. Re:Retro fad gone to far in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear Team Creimer,

    My YouTube channel has 222K subscribers and many videos with hundred of thousands of views:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    Now, with some slight adjustments, I think that together, we could make the view count skyrocket on your very own Team Creimer youtube channel :)

    Please feel confident to contact me if you want me to coach you, we aren't living so far away from each other so we could even easily meet.

    Love XX,

    --
    -Granny

  35. That internal memo was right. by philmarcracken · · Score: 2

    Google truly has stopped all innovation and is spending its time chasing competitors, often in saturated markets. They can afford these silly endeavors of course, but it feels like such a waste of talent and resources.

  36. Pepperidge Farms by CanHasDIY · · Score: 2

    Does anyone remember when OnLive and the Ouya console were the "streaming game service" flavor du jour?

    Pepperidge Farms remembers.

    --
    An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    1. Re:Pepperidge Farms by Hodr · · Score: 1

      Pepperidge Farms remembers.

  37. Re:Retro fad gone to far in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please leave creimer alone Granny PottyMouth!

    He is safely contained here on /. at -1.

    Thanks Granny,

  38. Re:Retro fad gone to far in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly,

    It seems like Chris is a victim here. He keeps on reading those SEO, youtube algorithm, basically get rich quick sites. He doesn't realize that he is the fish for them since they make money off him with their own scheme. Then, he wastes his time trying to implement what those sites suggest and he ends up disturbing people.

    I mean, those crooks tell Chris that he has to build personal brands and he goes on the Internet and makes everything about himself public!

    I believe we should bring this up at our next meeting. He might not be our only patient victim of such on-line abuse.

    --
    Silvia Bunge
    Psychology Department
    University of California, Berkeley

  39. Re:Retro fad gone to far in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Creimertard mod down.

  40. Thats (not) a Great Idea! by LeftCoastThinker · · Score: 1

    All the games will be free to play, but the console will come equipped with a 360 degree camera and microphone that are always on and are required to be unobstructed 24/7 in order for the console to work so Google can spy on you, on top of all the metrics and personal info they will collect on you and ads they will push in your face on the console itself....

    --
    If you disagree, please post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like
  41. also on the schedule: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Also on the schedule, Google plans to introduce a second game streaming service to compete with Yeti in 2019, and then a quiet cancellation of both projects a few months later.

  42. Re:It's not the game companies that will half-ass by blind+biker · · Score: 1

    and we are left with a stillborn service that makes the Phantom console look like Steve Jobs christened it from Heaven.

    Points of Reference:
    Gmail
    Hangouts
    G+
    Whatever their Photo Service is
    Google Glasses
    ChromeOS
    etc
    etc
    etc

    Are you kidding or being sarcastic in a strange way? Google is still very dedicated to many of the products in your list: Google Photos, ChomeOS, Gmail, Hangouts, G+. 5 out of 6 in your list.

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
  43. Funny how consoles sweat to provide 4k HDR... by ffkom · · Score: 2

    ... pristine rendered graphics at high frame-rates to your TV, with game enthusiasts pixel-peeping every new release for the slightest differences in image quality. And then some corporations tell you they will provide alike streamed over your meager Internet line.

    The truth with all streaming video services is that they use such heavily lossy compressions my eyes hurt from looking at the artefacts.

    I like my gaming hardware local, offline, and connected to my 4k TV at 18 GBit/s (via HDMI).

  44. Get to know JEWgle JUDENoidz! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jews believe this of all they call goyim/gentiles (any non-jew): Jews = biggest racists of all (for which they "jew guilt" you for no less! They're hypocrites known as thieves all thru history or were Argentines in the 1940 under Perrone, Spanish inquistion & Spain 1492 (Christopher Columbus the jew https://duckduckgo.com/?q=%22C... sailed to the US for them to create it), France (1306), Egypt (despoiled/robbed by jews), Arabs (pre & post 1948), England (1330 Edward longshanks), Romans under titus, Russia pogroms and Germany who got rid of them from their nations nazi german's too? No. Driven into DESERTS ages ago! Don't wonder why after all those exilings above. Should anyone doubt any of this see Jacob Javits' crony Rosenthal spill the beans on it https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4zMVZ8HnFI/ where he called all Christianity fools for helping Israel and the biggest scam of all time per their beliefs below from their Talmud. This is the province of the synagogue of Satan (Khazar/Pharisees whom Jesus Christ himself kicked to the curb out of the temple & they killed him for it. Jeremiah did the same to them also + the Essenes could not stand them either breaking away from the pharisee corruption):

    Maria Abramovic satanist spirit cooker pal of Hillary Clinton the Voodoo queen is a jew https://www.google.com/search?...

    John Podesta is yet another satanist child molesting sicko JEW buddy of Hillary Clinton's too!

    Like Hillary Clinton's mentor Saul Alinsky author of rules for radicals book dedicated to Lucifer

    "Most Jews do not like to admit it, but our god is Lucifer â" so I wasnâ(TM)t lying â" and we are his chosen people. Lucifer is very much aliveâ Harold Rosenthal http://www.thetruthseeker.co.u...

    Jewish rabbi openly admits to satan worship use white children's blood they kill for passover bread, infiltrating and subverting the catholic church, creating the Jesuit order https://www.youtube.com/watch?... and https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    Barbara Spectre, a jew, tells everyone it's jews orchestrating the muslim migrant problem in Europe https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MFE0qAiofMQ/ . No migrant raping of women in Poland. Tons in Sweden. Do the math. Use common-sense. This is to get muslims and other goyim/gentiles to wipe one another out as incompatible cultures that will clash and always have.

    Rabbi A. Finkelstein ADMITS their greatest enemies are ARABS and WHITES (blacks too) whom they wish to kill one another in a 'theater of war' which they find AMUSING https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    Finkelstein also admits JEWS DID 9/11 https://www.youtube.com/watch?... profiting by it (and that 3,000 jews employed there did not show up for work that day knowing about it beforehand).

    Finkelstein also admits JEWS are going to destroy the U.S. Dollar and dumping it for other world currencies and gold to destroy the United States.

    George Soros who funds groups to create division in the USA?? A jew. One who sold his own jew people into death for the nazis.

    Zucker now FIRED @ CNN is another frying publicly for lying about "russians" and John Bonifield a producer @ CNN said it is bs. Van Jones did also.

    Bernie Madoff (who made off with everyone's money, especially construction union pension

  45. Re:It's not the game companies that will half-ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google is still very dedicated to many of the products in your list: Google Photos

    Guessing he's referring to Panoramio, which Google recently switched off for no obvious pressing reason, resulting in Google Earth losing about 90% of the user-generated photos that were one of its best features.

  46. Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Their Play Store has a crippled search, doesn't let you filter anything, and will recommend apps that you've already (or even still have) installed. Given that that's the closest thing they have related to gaming media right now, I don't have high hopes for this project

  47. Ship has sailed... by XSportSeeker · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ROFL... wrong release date aside, can Google be any more clueless these days?

    I think it's sort of a Sillicon Valley syndrome at this point... they live in such a disconnected place from reality that they don't even realize how much money they are wasting in ressurecting dead concepts, abandoning products people really use, and churning out the most obvious mistakes that basically anyone outside their campus can point out to them. Even people who work there sometimes quit to open start ups with some of the most ridiculously bad ideas, like that Bodega thing. Perhaps they are relying too much on what their data collection and AI overlords tell them instead of just going around to ask what people think of it, real people, their costumers.

    Not only game streaming services have failed a long time ago, all the reasons people both from the client to the provider side pointed out as to why they failed have not changed. And they are incredibly easy to understand.
    Basically, you don't really have enough people with stable connections to make this work that fits the profile required. And the people who actually do have stable connections and cares about paying more for high bandwidth and whatnot, are that much more likely to care about unsolvable streaming problems like latency in controls, and as much high res as possible without it killing the game multiplayer stream in itself. They are that much more likely to just pay extra for a gaming PC or console instead.

    With how much game prices are dropping, specially on mobile and PC side, plus how you'd still need to invest some money to keep game streaming going on - like a stable and beefy connection, either Ethernet or powerful routers, plus some monthly subscription plan -, and then the knowledge and understanding on how streaming works... it all adds up to an extremely limited market.

    The most exemplary case was the entire nVidia Shield concept... nVidia got an adequate device (which is still among the most powerful in it's class despite being 3yrs old already), had a whole ton of publisher support, it worked well not only for game streaming but also as a media streaming device... and yet it's still niche and sold kinda poorly for what it was, with a reasonable price to boot. The whole investment justified only because Nintendo got in the mix and used the SoC in the Switch.

    And it's not like we had one or two cases of failures and meltdowns, plus still surviving services that would compete directly with whatever Google is trying to offer... it's a full list of them:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    I'm telling you, people working at Google and several other companies in Sillicon Valley live in some alternate reality without even realizing it. I can't explain it in any other way. I mean, sure, Google does have some highly valuable and always improving stuff, but that's usually limited to teams that have good leadership running a tight ship. But the moronic ideas that I constantly hear from these huge corporations at times makes me wonder what sort of environment can lead to such stuff even coming out of meetings in the first place, let alone being announced out to the press and sometimes becoming real products.

    The entire smartphone approach from Microsoft, persistense on Windows 10S and Window Store, the entire idea of churning out multiple apps and services for the exact same thing from Google, how they handled Hangouts, payment systems, chat, social networks... damn, it's a level of corporate and employee blindness that's incredibly hard to understand. And it's not a hindsight thing... tons of people saw those as failed ideas as soon as they were announced. It's a bit baffling. Hello, do you even market research anymore?

    Heck, one of Google's latest "project" is pretty telling... that lifecasting camera thing that seemingly came out straight from the past decade or so. Wasn't there really anyone working at Google that knew about the lifecasting fad of early 2000s that spawned multiple devices just like that, and how shortlived the whole thing was? Really?

    1. Re:Ship has sailed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But communism will work this time!

    2. Re:Ship has sailed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With how much game prices are dropping, specially on mobile and PC side, plus how you'd still need to invest some money to keep game streaming going on - like a stable and beefy connection, either Ethernet or powerful routers, plus some monthly subscription plan -, and then the knowledge and understanding on how streaming works... it all adds up to an extremely limited market.

      Connection stability and speed depends on the technology or wiring more than on price. In my country you'll pay the same whether for 10Mbps or 15Mbps dsl or 100Mbps cable or 1Gbps fiber or 512K dsl.
      Imagine you live in municipal community housing, or the cheapest flat in some century old building that didn't get cable TV and thus got wired up for real fiber. You sign up for internet (around 30 EUR a month) then find out your $200 smart TV or the ISP set top box supports games streaming. And your "real" hardware sucks at games (linux desktop, windows laptop, android phone w/ 1GB RAM 8GB flash, etc.).

      Low income people might use this. It will be niche but the niche may grow in the 2020s as a few millions households get fiber here and there (like, rural roll outs eventually, they're profitable and the tech is not new, it just takes a lot of time, low priority)
      US is much likely to not get very much residential fiber though, because cable TV was such a big thing there.

  48. probably sucky games too by e3m4n · · Score: 1

    without the game titles its going to be an epic fail. I opted for the original FireTV because it was a streaming box, but also had a BT wireless game controller to play games. There really wasn't anything worth having IMO. Fast forward many years and I think I've used that $50 controller maybe 3 times ever. More than likely this google device is going to be an overpriced means of playing Candy Crush on your livingroom TV

  49. Selling idle GPU time by DrYak · · Score: 1

    And I don't think there was anything quite like an OS revolving around a web browser so thoroughly before ChromeOS came out.

    Actually, there were tons of almost "browser-only" OS for ages by that point.
    - Lots of them using heavily customize and cut down versions of the "Embed" editions of Windows, mostly in the corporate world.
    - And lots relying on customized Linux installation in more hacking-friendly environment.
    BUT ALL OF THEM being exclusively used in "Kiosk" mode : as single use terminal to browse a captive site or to display a slideshow and other information on a public screen.

    Before ChromeOS, all web-browser-based OS where single-use, because there wasn't much you could do on the web anyway.

    The "tour de force" of Google isn't as much of being yet another company capable of design yet another variation of the web-kiosk paradigm.
    The novelty of Google is being the first company to actually PROVIDE lots of application making a web-based-os actually useful for everyday work, thank to the rest of Google's portfolio, in particular all their web-applications (GMail, Google Docs, etc.) instead of being just "yet another screen showing the weather forecast in the hotel's lobby".

    I think game streaming makes sense on some level. I know they have data centers for miles and miles. And it wouldn't surprise me if some amount of them sat idle for some percentage of time.

    This is exactly what I immediately though of (calling it the "equivalent of Amazon's EC2 for Google's AI servers").
    They probably have tons of GPU power laying around to be used for their deep-neural-net AI. (They reported that they still rely on GPGPU for the training part, and they tensor-accelerator cards are best at applying a already-trained model).
    Might probably use them for video compression of newer-ish algorithm that don't have dedicated hardware compressors neither (VP-9, experiments with upcoming AV-1, etc.)

    Between peaks of usage, these GPUs would otherwise stay unused.
    Streaming games seem a good way to monetize them during down-times.

    How the latency/compression thing would be resolved I have no idea.

    Also Google has data centers sprinkled all-over the world - i.e.: most of them within a reasonable ping-time of any potential customer - meaning that the latency problems are halfway solved for them, unlike for game streaming startups which need to build infrastructure from the ground up.

    (And most modern GPUs are capable to use their onboard video hardware to compress their own output for streaming purpose - think Twitch, etc.)

    I'm not saying that Google won't have difficulty. I'm just saying that when you are a massive corporation with datacenters all within 5 ms worth of hops of any internet enabled Chromcast HDMI stick, already stacked with giant piles of GPUs, setting up a game streaming service is a tiny bit easier than when you're a small start-up dreaming big.

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  50. Big difference by DrYak · · Score: 1

    There is a single big difference between Yeti and all the other Silicon Valley startups that came before :

    Google.
    And their datacenters.

    Currently, Google has already datacenters all over the world: there's always a Google server within 5 ms of ping time within reach of any of your internet-enabled gadgets.
    Currently, Google has also tons of GPUs in those datacenter, mostly used for their deep neural net AIs and/or to help compressing video that user upload on Youtube (specially for codec that don't have a lot of compression hardware (like latest AV-1 experiments).

    In other words : google has a giant low-latency infrastructure that they can harness for Yeti, whereas any former startup had to build their infrastructure from the ground up (meaning not enough server, most at a too long ping-time distance from your chormecast HDMI stick).

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  51. Re:Retro fad gone to far in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Creimer is too busy being a Silicon Valley Comic Con affiliate member.

  52. Re:Retro fad gone to far in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess your underwear and the TARDIS are both bigger inside than outside, huh?

  53. Re:Retro fad gone to far in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He also preordered the Funko POP! Popeye from ToyWiz. I wonder how many Funkos he has. Most people can't stop at one.

  54. Re:Retro fad gone to far in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These creimertard posts remind me of when Chris-Chan used to talk like a TV commercial for no reason.

    EEh go down to ya local gamestop videogame and accessories retailer, ugh much better than uh game crazy! An buy the latest sonic the hedgehog available for nintendo wii and sony playstation 3 interactive video game consoles in case you have both you can buy two copies but you better hurry they will sell out faster than blue hedgehogs run heh heh.

    Chris do you mind if I ask what you think you will get out of constantly hyperlinking to other people's commercial products?