Welcome to the heavyweight game streaming wars...
Two things happened in the world of on-line game-streaming recently:
1) Sony
bought over Gaikai, currently the only real rival to OnLive.
2) Google
signed a deal to incorporate native OnLive support into Google TV.
At first sight this may not sound like much of a problem,
just the integration of this emerging technology into the more established
marketplace... Well on first sight maybe, but this has already caused some unease
even before any set-top devices utilising these technologies have been released.
Google and OnLive have announced that both the OnLive service
and its proprietary controller device will be incorporated into the Google TV
service. Support for the controller will be ‘baked in’ to the software, and the
streaming service will be available as a Google TV app, regardless of the
manufacturer producing the set-top hardware.
This means that set-top boxes like Sony’s NSZ-GS7, which
incorporates Google TV, would ‘in theory’ be capable of running the OnLive games
streaming system. There was some initial speculation that this would indeed be
the case, but then support for OnLive seems to have been quietly pulled.




Well not a lot directly, but the book got me thinking about the internet’s influence
on games and the current games industry, and it’s sub cultures. There are a lot
of hacker types in 4chan... No, I don’t mean what you are probably thinking (although
they undoubtedly are also there). Good old-fashioned ‘hackers’ are codies at
heart, programmers that do what they do because they like it. And nowadays they
are unfortunately becoming dying breed.

