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On the contrary, I don’t think the PSX emulation would be worse for input lag; that’s likely all delay from WebRTC, so it’s probably roughly equivalent.

For that reason it’s pretty amazing the (lack of) input delay you see with Stadia, which I believe is also built on WebRTC — although with one peer (Google) always hosting the video and the other (the user) providing input I’m wondering if there’s some clever way to improve upon this...



It could be the TURN server adding latency or some issues browser side.

Which browser and version did you use?


One trick that’s not really accessible to the general public: Stadia does some input anticipation and so will actually press the button for you just before it thinks you will press it, thus making it seem like a low-latency button press.


What happens when you don't press the button?


Then Google knows you weren't going to and doesn't.

https://cloudflare-ipfs.com/ipfs/Qmdpah7j4mLswRLsv55qX4R9RzK...


> There have always been arguments showing that free will is an illusion, some based on hard physics, others based on pure logic. Most people agree these arguments are irrefutable, but no one ever really accepts the conclusion.

When I had a big LSD trip, not only did I understand the fact that we don't have free will, I experienced it. It felt as real as my body.

I don't think about free will anymore, I feel like I've already watched the movie.


I don't even know what free will is supposed to be. Either all our decisions are deterministic, or they're due to random quantum phenomena, at some level. Which of those is the good scenario?


Linking it back up to my original question ("what happens if you don't press the button?") - I suspect Google cannot actually know you weren't going to. The outcome is computable but intractable.

Free will is just a level of analysis that assumes the outcome is intractable, and doesn't bother trying to compute it.


I don't know physics, but can't quantum phenomena be deterministic? Maybe we just haven't discovered the rules yet.


Well, if everything is deterministic we might as well scroll to the end.

I think I’ll go with random quantum please.


How's that any better? You might as well scroll to the end there too.


“Reports indicate that while the Google system may be ready for what it thinks is your next input, the local player will always have control over the input.” - https://hothardware.com/news/google-stadia-performance

I would prefer to see some newer information about this, but the Google search pages are flooded with that from before launch.




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