this post was submitted on 11 Nov 2024
313 points (97.6% liked)

Shitty admin

190 readers
1 users here now

Welcome to Shitty Admin!

This community is for shit posting about terrible things computer admin do. Cross posts are welcome and so is satire.

Please no politics or harmful content

founded 2 weeks ago
MODERATORS
313
submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by possiblylinux127 to c/shittyadmin
 

Update: fixed

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] kekmacska 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

you can actually connect to online ram, but it will be slow and potentionally unsecure if you don't secure it. This is how cloud gaming works

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Not sure if serious but that is not how cloud gaming works. Cloud gaming offloads running the entire game to another machine, so CPU, RAM, GPU, storage, and network stuff. Then it just sends a stream with the video output and audio to your device while your device streams your input back to the remote machine.

Sorry if it was meant as a joke, but hard to tell because what you're saying is technically possible, though it would be beyond slow. Hopefully, even if it was a joke, the technical details are as interesting to others as they were to me when I wondered what it would look like if your RAM was stored on another PC on the internet.

CPU to RAM latency is generally around 0.05 - 0.1 us while network latency is likely going to be around 10,000 - 50,000 us, assuming it's not far geographically with good network conditions, maybe going as low as 5000 - 10,000 us (5 - 10 ms). And it doesn't just need to do that once per frame, but millions to billions of times per frame.

Cloud gaming can achieve whatever framerate your bandwidth can handle at the resolution and compression used (and I'm guessing generally isn't bandwidth limited if your connection can handle Netflix at decent quality). There's input latency because it takes 5 - 50ms for any inputs to get to the machine, but everything is computed locally.

Remote memory would generate frames so slowly that it would make more sense to measure them in seconds per frame than frames per second. And those seconds per frame might be better expressed in minutes or hours.

It might function ok for a page file. It would be on the order of HDD performance, though. Anyone who played games back in the day probably remembers how long it would take to alt tab or close a game before you could use the rest of your computer because the OS had to page most of other programs' memory back into RAM from disk.

[–] kekmacska 1 points 2 weeks ago

i'm just tired and generalizing things too much. Don't need to take me as someone purposely spreading misinformation