According to wikipedia:
"OnLive is a cloud computing, gaming-on-demand platform:[3][4][5][6] the games are synchronized, rendered, and stored on remote servers and delivered via the Internet.
The service is available using the OnLive Game System,[7] PCs running Microsoft Windows (XP, Vista, 7) and Intel-based Macs with OS X 10.5.8 or later.[8] A low-end computer, as long as it can play video, may be used to play any kind of game since the game is computed on the OnLive server. For that reason, the service is being seen as a competitor for the console market.[9][10] All games on the service are available in 720p format. OnLive recommends an Internet connection of 5 Mbit/s or faster, and a 3 Mbit/s connection meets the minimum system requirements.[11] The average broadband connection speed in the US at the end of 2008 was 3.9 Mbit/s, while 25% of US broadband connections were rated faster than 5 Mbit/s.[12]."
Apparently this company is now working on a new kind of wifi that does away with most disadvantages of current wifi tech using a completly new way of sending radio waves. Here's a video of the presentation that starts at the part where the technology is mentioned:
YouTube - ‪Steve Perlman at Columbia Engineering School June 4, 2011‬‏
You will find a lot of similarities with what tesla did in the claims he makes.
"OnLive is a cloud computing, gaming-on-demand platform:[3][4][5][6] the games are synchronized, rendered, and stored on remote servers and delivered via the Internet.
The service is available using the OnLive Game System,[7] PCs running Microsoft Windows (XP, Vista, 7) and Intel-based Macs with OS X 10.5.8 or later.[8] A low-end computer, as long as it can play video, may be used to play any kind of game since the game is computed on the OnLive server. For that reason, the service is being seen as a competitor for the console market.[9][10] All games on the service are available in 720p format. OnLive recommends an Internet connection of 5 Mbit/s or faster, and a 3 Mbit/s connection meets the minimum system requirements.[11] The average broadband connection speed in the US at the end of 2008 was 3.9 Mbit/s, while 25% of US broadband connections were rated faster than 5 Mbit/s.[12]."
Apparently this company is now working on a new kind of wifi that does away with most disadvantages of current wifi tech using a completly new way of sending radio waves. Here's a video of the presentation that starts at the part where the technology is mentioned:
YouTube - ‪Steve Perlman at Columbia Engineering School June 4, 2011‬‏
You will find a lot of similarities with what tesla did in the claims he makes.
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