
When we first heard the name “onLIVE” and the things it would bring to the gaming industry, we were skeptical because it was too good to be true, so many promises and high expectations. We felt it would be revolutionary and exciting to experience cloud gaming.
A lot of people have started buying into the idea of Microsoft that no one needs bluray and “digitalization” is next big thing to hit the industry, Digital library stacked up with games, movies, ebooks, musics and streaming capacity.

Dean Takahashi of VentureBeat writes: "OnLive has teamed up with British game retailer Green Man Gaming to resell subscriptions for OnLive’s cloud-gaming subscription service. The deal is the first of its kind in which a game retailer resells OnLive’s online bundles of games delivered via web-connected data centers, or the cloud."

With all the recent subscription services increasing in popularity including EA Access and PS Plus, The Game Fanatics decided to take another look at OnLive and how it could be the dark horse in the video game streaming race.
I still have onlive and compared to psn now it seems faster response time, and the ui is tons better. Imho.

Samit Sarkar of Polygon writes: "War Thunder, the free-to-play military MMO from Russian studio Gaijin Entertainment, is launching today on CloudLift, the cloud-based gaming service from OnLive, the latter company announced today.
CloudLift, which OnLive debuted this past March in open beta, is a subscription-based service that allows players to "lift" a limited selection of Steam titles they already own to the cloud, and then stream them to a variety of devices without needing to download the full game. Those devices include Mac- and Windows-based computers, as well as TVs and Android tablets. Because CloudLift is integrated with Steam, save games are synced across devices."
onWHAT?
Hopefully
onLive is going no where, it failed the day it was announced.
Honestly you guys need to do some research. Check out http://www.OnLiveInformer.c... they do daily news articles about OnLive it's anything but a fail.