1. Google Stadia was as disappointing as OnLive. Nothing has changed in the last 10 years in that regard.
7. C++ has multiple of those but expecting standardization is a pipe dream.
8. I personally am tired of "cross platform" apps that are based on electron but don't support Linux. To add insult to injury: running them with wine doesn't work 99% of the time.
1. I gotta say I couldn't disagree more. Sure, there might be some bias in my opinion but the landscape, the technology and the direction the industry is going has changed so much over the past decade I'm not really sure where to start.
Also, have you tried Stadia? If you have a good enough connection it's quite incredible.
7. Not expecting standardization but I'd argue C++ has zero of those. Vcpkg is _not bad_ but _no where near as easy_ as npm. Conan is better, IMO, but again it's so far off from being as simple as npm is for JavaScript.
Modules were approved. I'm convinced someone will be able to take modules, once they're implemented in a consistent manner across compilers, and implement an npm like service. Until then I think a general solution is just not practical.
7. C++ has multiple of those but expecting standardization is a pipe dream.
8. I personally am tired of "cross platform" apps that are based on electron but don't support Linux. To add insult to injury: running them with wine doesn't work 99% of the time.
9. Most FQDNs are not user facing.