"Your PC is also a Steambox" - Director M. Night Shyamalan, commenting on SteamOS announcement
haha!
"Your PC is also a Steambox" - Director M. Night Shyamalan, commenting on SteamOS announcement
This is such a terrible idea.
It's either for people who don't already PC game, and would sooner buy a console if they wanted to dip their toe in, or it's for Valve fans who don't need it, and would never choose what is basically a console with a gamepad over a new PC.
Who is this box for? Not non-gamers, not PC gamers, not console gamers. There's no one else left.
errr... yes?
Don't worry I'm sure the thousands of games currently out that stretch back across 20 years will get patched. Devs will just stop what they're doing and patch in Linux support.
If not don't worry you can stream them from your current PC and risk lag issues instead of just...playing them on your current PC.
4A Games already confirmed that they are currently porting Metro Last Light to Linux weeks ago. It's somewhat old news. Football Manager 2014 is already available for pre-order on Linux, so I could see Sega trying the get Creative Assembly to do the same with Total War II.
I came all over myself when I realized this was real, passed out, woke up, realized it wasn't a dream and repeated that process two more times.
This is the last gen of Xbox if this thing takes off.
Don't worry I'm sure the thousands of games currently out that stretch back across 20 years will get patched. Devs will just stop what they're doing and patch in Linux support.
If not don't worry you can stream them from your current PC and risk lag issues instead of just...playing them on your current PC.
This will be a such a disaster; Linux is simply dead.
Gaming OS for PC is huge, people who doesn't get it will get it pretty soon. It will depend on proper execution of course but this is where I have faith in Valve. Steam started slow and look where we are now. I'm sure that this announce is just the top of the iceberg. Anyone thinking that Valve won't apply the same rapid updates style to SteamOS as they've had going for Steam is delusional. Possibilities are endless.
I agree the core won't but the upgrades could.
As a PC Gamer, this sounds great.
Time to get Microsoft out of the equation.
The only [possible] advantage is that it may provide a better performance by removing the OS overhead; but obviously that requires the hardware manufacturers to collaborate with them.I don't understand why this is so fantastic.
my PC is hooked up to my TV already. I can sit on my couch or in front of my monitor and play my games/watch movies/browse the net, do whatever I want.
Why would I ever need this? Why is this so amazing if any normal PC does everything this does?
So instead of somehow getting a long HDMI cable to your TV, you're going to choose to buy a far more expensive box, which is going to cause latency and compression artifacting?I could see a basic SteamOS Box as a compelling purchase for the PC gamer who wants to play games better played with a couch/controller/TV, but whose PC is not physically situated in the living room.
That's exactly what has me (a console and PC gamer) very excited.
Serious question: Why would I get this if I could just plug my computer with an HDMI cable in the TV?
Keep your current windows PC and use it to stream games to it while Valve works on support on the Linux side of things. I think it's a good balance. Between this and VitaTV I can have all the games I need in any room of my house (assuming I ever buy another one!).
You still need windows for now if you want to play your entire library. You can play hundreds of games natively, and stream thousands from a windows PC.
If there are as many AAA games coming to linux as valve hints, then going linux-only might be alright if you're not trudging through a backlog.
Other than this costs $100 less.
EDIT:
errr... yes?
I'm still trying to figure this out... I guess whatever this "living room machine" is will have to be capable of installing this OS on it -- HTPC or Steambox. Meaning you can't just run SteamOS on anything like they're suggesting.What is a "living room machine"?
Or just play them on your windows PC like always? :/
More like one mid-to-high end PC to run your entire library, and one shitty spec netbook with HDMI out to run all of that on your TV.
The openness that makes this great is also what's going to kill it for the mass market. Once you start having to explain to people which games their steam box can and cannot run, the vast majority of non-core gamers will drop out. The advantage with consoles is the simplicity of knowing when you put a game in the disk drive, it's going to run no matter what.
I love the idea of a steam box, especially for the streaming solutions. I just don't see the appeal to people not already involved in PC gaming.
Maybe. But then you're just building a PC. They could make it more user friendly, but if this thing is going to be big (sold in retail stores) it has be "pre-built" and not really upgradable.
More than serious. Every major linux project has been a failure; just look at its main two office programs, they are nearly 10 years behind Microsoft Office, and one was abandoned for quite a few years; no major smartphone producer makes devices supporting them; Gnome and KDE desktop haven't seen any major change in nearly a decade; the kernel barely has started working with hybrid graphics which are so common on laptops; it's still buggy as hell and a pain to troubleshoot.
Well these features are being added to steam as well so it does sorta affect you..
IS it though? All major community applications are several years behind their alternatives on Windows and Mac. Kernel is behind the trend even more.![]()
Linux community is pretty lively last I checked I think. A lot of people still would like alternatives and options on PC.
Yeah, I'm not sure what c0de means. A lot of the shading stuff is probably native to the hardware for the sake of optimization, but I believe the basic framework in most of them is OpenGL.
I don't understand why this is so fantastic.
my PC is hooked up to my TV already. I can sit on my couch or in front of my monitor and play my games/watch movies/browse the net, do whatever I want.
Why would I ever need this? Why is this so amazing if any normal PC does everything this does?
This is what i'm looking forward to primarily as a console player. But currently i would rather just get a ps4 becan't it doesn't really seem to have additional/significant benefits at the moment pertaining to me. This announcement at it's current state only seems beneficial to pc gamers that have high end pc'sThink of it this way..as a console player... Say this year you buy a $200 asus steam box that plays games at settings that consoles are getting . In three years Samsung puts out another steam box that triples the specs you currently have for $200 that is not only backwards compatible but now allows you to up the settings on those games you couldn't before.
I really don't get what's so confusing about any of this. It seems fairly obvious to me.
It's a Linux distribution that
1) Will run on Steambox (Or Steamboxes)
2) Can be used by manufacturers of HTPCs (which will also incidentally make their products ~80 USD cheaper than were they running Windows)
3) Can be integrated into future consumer electronics, e.g. TVs.
4) Can be installed by anyone on their PC, if they want to.
It serves to broaden the Steam userbase, and is complementary to the PC (Windows, OSX, Linux) Steam client.
As someone with a PC connected to all his display devices I'm not particularly interested, but I'm also not "confused".
Both Rome and Football Manager are pretty terribly not suited for living room big screen comfy couch gaming.
This is such a terrible idea.
It's either for people who don't already PC game, and would sooner buy a console if they wanted to dip their toe in, or it's for Valve fans who don't need it, and would never choose what is basically a console with a gamepad over a new PC.
Who is this box for? Not non-gamers, not PC gamers, not console gamers. There's no one else left.
I don't understand why this is so fantastic.
my PC is hooked up to my TV already. I can sit on my couch or in front of my monitor and play my games/watch movies/browse the net, do whatever I want.
Why would I ever need this? Why is this so amazing if any normal PC does everything this does?
Two OSes. You can install Windows onto the SteamBox if you wish, and you and install SteamOS onto your gaming PC if you wish. Dual booting ftw!o = SteamOS
[o ] = Steambox (the box where the OS is), obviously.
whats o+o?
So there are rules in place to ensure no game will ever be SteamOS exclusive?
Wait, I may have spoke to soon.
Couldn't Valve possibly make sort of a "Steam Stick", that plugs into your TV, and let's you stream games wirelessly from your PC?
Where is it srared that it's ubuntu based?
X isn't the problem here. Even with X, most 3D apps perform exceptionally well on Linux.I think getting rid of X will boost a little bit if they do but I am interested in optimizations they did in general.
But even then you could still have hardware and price options.
Like buying a android tablet.
the only reason im exited is because sony/ms/steam will all be competing with neat ideas to beat each other out or taking the same ideas and improving them, sort of like steam/ms family sharingSomebody tell me why I'm supposed to be excited?
No. PS3 has support for an OpenGL ES derivative, but most games are written using LibGCM. As far as I can tell, this is the main API used by Vita and PS4 as well.
Yes, the total failure of Android in the smartphone and tablet market has conclusively demonstrated that providing a Linux-based OS targeted at a specific market and letting manufacturers use it on a wide variety of devices is doomed to failure.Totally agree. If anything as others have said I could see this fragmenting/confusing the PC market even further, NOT moving it forward.