Still hard drive hunting for those hundreds of G of AAA titles? Watching graphics card prices makes you question life.
Just waiting for the download bar to fill is enough to go downstairs and buy two cups of coffee.
Recently came across YOM, which is quite interesting. It wants to delete the action of "downloading" directly from the dictionary.
You can play by opening a webpage, focusing on instant play, with no need for thousands of dollars in hardware.
This is not just about convenience, but also a violent dismantling of traditional giants like AWS.
YOM @YOM_Official is following the DePIN route, turning idle gaming PCs into mini data centers.
Previously, cloud services from big companies cost several dollars per hour; now, the cost has been cut to just a few cents.
Developers can deploy trial versions in seconds; this real-time feedback is what Web3 should look like.
What Google Stadia couldn't achieve before might really need distributed computing power to fill the gap.
After all, for us, as long as the experience isn't laggy, of course, choose whoever is cheaper.
Rather than giving money to Amazon, it's better to let idle graphics cards earn some electricity fees—this logic makes sense.
Cloud gaming has been talked about for so many years; this time, with DePIN, it might really take off.
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Still hard drive hunting for those hundreds of G of AAA titles? Watching graphics card prices makes you question life.
Just waiting for the download bar to fill is enough to go downstairs and buy two cups of coffee.
Recently came across YOM, which is quite interesting. It wants to delete the action of "downloading" directly from the dictionary.
You can play by opening a webpage, focusing on instant play, with no need for thousands of dollars in hardware.
This is not just about convenience, but also a violent dismantling of traditional giants like AWS.
YOM @YOM_Official is following the DePIN route, turning idle gaming PCs into mini data centers.
Previously, cloud services from big companies cost several dollars per hour; now, the cost has been cut to just a few cents.
Developers can deploy trial versions in seconds; this real-time feedback is what Web3 should look like.
What Google Stadia couldn't achieve before might really need distributed computing power to fill the gap.
After all, for us, as long as the experience isn't laggy, of course, choose whoever is cheaper.
Rather than giving money to Amazon, it's better to let idle graphics cards earn some electricity fees—this logic makes sense.
Cloud gaming has been talked about for so many years; this time, with DePIN, it might really take off.