angular graphics
Banned
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2414039,00.asp
As far as I understand it:
- Valve is interested in creating a SteamBox (design + their very own specification as Gabe said).. someday.
- Several companies are making their own little compact PCs, and Valve told them "sure bring them to CES so that we can show an idea of what the SteamBox might be. Also let's begin a discussion about a potential standard".
- These PCs weren't really created with any standard in mind, not a standard by Valve anyway. They are just compact PCs running Steam's BPM. None of them are even potential SteamBoxes. Because:
- Valve says it will take a lengthy period of testing to come up with a standard.
- SteamBox is more aimed to become the definitive standard for PC gaming on HDTV, not necessarily a console-like product (and competitor?).
A lot of rumors are floating around about Valve announcing a "Steam Box" gaming PC/system at CES 2013, running the company's Steam platform and offering PC gaming in a small, living-room-ready package. Valve is indeed at CES 2013, and I spent some time at their booth getting the definitive answer:
There is no Steam Box, but something is coming.
The booth, which was remarkably empty, showed off gaming computers in small form factors connected to HDTVs and running Steam's Big Picture big-screen interface. However, none of them were Steam Boxes, or Steam Box prototypes, or even design concepts of what a Steambox could look like. According to Valve representative Tom Giardito, several of the systems were simply off-the-shelf Alienware systems running the Linux version of Steam with Big Picture.
Computer manufacturer Xi3 has been reported as the company making the Steam Box, according to several accounts from a press event Monday night. However, I confirmed that this is not the case. The Xi3 "Piston" computer was in Valve's booth next to an Alienware system, but neither were intended to be definitive, or even possible Steam Boxes.
According to Giardito, Valve's presence at CES is primarily to meet with hardware manufacturers to explore how a Steam Box interface or standard might be made. He said that there is no single Steam Box, and that there will be no retail Steam Boxes until lengthy testing processes have been completed. He noted that Xi3 is one of many hardware partners working with Valve, and that a Steam Box could become more of a standard for gaming PCs designed for HDTVs than a Xbox or PlayStation-like-product.
Valve is working on some kind of Steam Box, but we haven't seen it yet. Still, users with gaming PCs connected to their HDTVs can enjoy a Steam Box-like experience with Steam's Big Picture interface, which was recently launched on Steam. Big Picture turns the Steam menus into a full-screen interface intended for use from a couch, with larger and more graphically oriented visual elements.
As far as I understand it:
- Valve is interested in creating a SteamBox (design + their very own specification as Gabe said).. someday.
- Several companies are making their own little compact PCs, and Valve told them "sure bring them to CES so that we can show an idea of what the SteamBox might be. Also let's begin a discussion about a potential standard".
- These PCs weren't really created with any standard in mind, not a standard by Valve anyway. They are just compact PCs running Steam's BPM. None of them are even potential SteamBoxes. Because:
- Valve says it will take a lengthy period of testing to come up with a standard.
- SteamBox is more aimed to become the definitive standard for PC gaming on HDTV, not necessarily a console-like product (and competitor?).