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The Wall Street Journal’s David Pierce details Blade, a new service run out of France that allows customers with high speed internet connections to virtually use a very powerful computer they don’t actually own. For a monthly fee, users are given access to a machine powerful enough to play the latest, graphic intensive games or run processor-heavy programs like graphical editing software. Pierce likens the service to an Uber for computers. He writes:

Sometimes a game just clicks for me. Last week, when I bought โ€œCall of Duty: WWII,โ€ the latest in the epic series of shooter games, I found a gritty mess of a game unlike anything Iโ€™d ever played. I couldnโ€™t put it down.

So I didnโ€™t. I played on my home computer, my work computer, my phone, an iPad, my 65-inch Android-powered Sony TVโ€”even a crappy old Android tablet I found in the closet. On every device, all I had to do was log into the Shadow app, made by a French startup called Blade. As soon as I did, poof: I was right back on the beaches in Normandy. I could even pause the game on one device then immediately pick it up on another.

How is that possible? Because the โ€œcomputerโ€ that was running my game is actually a virtual system housed in a data center somewhere. Every time I log in, Blade spins up the processing and graphics power needed to run a gamer-grade Windows PC. Wherever I have a superfast connection to the internet, my machine is there for me. I can access it via any device with an internet connection and a screenโ€”as long as I pay the subscription fee.

Operating in France for about a year, Blade is expanding to the U.S., and pitching itself initially to gamers, who it hopes will pay for the sort of performance Shadow offers. But this phenomenon isnโ€™t just about gaming.

Read more here.