May
03
2011

The Insidious Creep of Latency Hell

Twinbee writes “Gamers often find ‘input lag’ annoying, but over the years, delay has crept into many other gadgets with equally painful results. Something as simple as mobile communication or changing TV channel can suffer. Software too is far from innocent (Java or Visual Studio 2010 anyone?), and even the desktop itself is riddled with ‘invisible’ latencies which can frustrate users (take the new Launcher bar in Ubuntu 11 for example). More worryingly, Bufferbloat is a problem that plagues the internet, but has only recently hit the news. Half of the problem is that it’s often difficult to pin down unless you look out for it. As Mick West pointed out: “Players, and sometimes even designers, cannot always put into words what they feel is wrong with a particular game’s controls…..Or they might not be able to tell you anything, and simply say the game sucked, without really understanding why it sucked.”"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Originally posted here:
The Insidious Creep of Latency Hell

Written by Staff in: Slashdot | Tags:

No Comments

Comments are closed.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL


adsense

Cool-O-Rama: News for Geeks