When you move to an appropriate text input field, a floating pop up keyboard appears on screen that has two small circular cursors on it:
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hmm wonder if it could be used (well) for keyboard shortcuts
When you move to an appropriate text input field, a floating pop up keyboard appears on screen that has two small circular cursors on it:
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It's funny ... my initial reaction was: "Oh? AAs? I guess that's kind of shitty." and then I immediately realized that I've been using the same rechargeable AAs in my 360 controller for like the past 5 years.Two thumbs up. Preach.
I mean I'll replace the built in battery packs without a problem when they die, but I'd much rather just swap from my large pool of always ready rechargeable AAs.
Looks nice but AA batteries? That's so gross.
lol you guys with the batteries.
I'd prefer a built in battery myself but it doesn't really weigh into my opinion on the totally new and innovative controller that we can buy starting today.
The battery argument. It's been done.
For me that's why i (without having used either) prefer the "dog" model, but i'll have to wait to October to see if the sticks works just as well.Additionally, people quickly noticed that there was no corresponding equivalent of the d-pad buttons on the Xbox controller. While ABXY were represented, Up, down, left, and right were not. And in most 3D action games, those buttons are not used to directional input, but rather as odd-ball buttons, like inventory management or maps or things of that sort. Devs wanted an equivalent so that the controller made a bit more sense when they played X-input games.
Me too.Preordered. Super excited for this.
Thanks for the in-depth reply Krejlooc.
For me that's why i (without having used either) prefer the "dog" model, but i'll have to wait to October to see if the sticks works just as well.
This is very true. cool.Well, in the trailer, they pointed out the ability to change the modes of the controller on the fly. There will surely be a mode where the left half of the pad is basically a playstation controller, where the analog stick is recognized as x-input. If that were the case, you could use the d-pad areas of the left touch pad for the things you mentioned.
Conversely, if you're using the left touchpad as it's intended, and you need equivalent buttons, you can use the analog stick by pushing it in the cardinal directions. Think the way super smash bros uses the C-stick on the gamecube controller.
I guess 2005 was a great year then. Valve and Microsoft nailed it there, the other batteries will eventually die and be a pain to replace, with AAs it's a lot easier to replace even if the battery life isn't as great. Too bad Nintendo and Sony didn't take that route.
Figured they'd use the daisy wheel for text but the new keybaord looks like it'll be a lot quicker to type with.
will not be using this as I'm left handed and this controller is clearly for right handed people. You can keep your steam machine, valve and your controller.
What would the advantages of using a Steam Link versus an Nvidia Shield be?
What would the advantages of using a Steam Link versus an Nvidia Shield be?
You know, the original controller was designed very specifically to be ambidextrous, and they brought that up several times in defense of that design. Valve always maintained that, with familiarity, you would be able to use either touchpad as a means of locomation just as well as you would use a D-pad or analog stick, but a lot of people said they couldn't adapt.
I wonder if they will consider releasing left handed versions of this controller in the future, since they had considered left handed people originally.
Nothing at all. The experience of streaming to my shield is basically identical to my experience of streaming to my actual steam machine at my office. I'm expecting the steam link to be the exact same experience.
Clearly, the steam link isn't going to be the only option for in-home streaming. Eventually, those x86 sticks are going to become good enough to do decent in-home streaming as well. It's neat, though, that valve has such a cheap streaming solution right now. The shield is several hundred dollars, and the gigabyte steam machine I have retails for like $600. Once those x86 sticks start making viable steam links, you'll start seeing streaming solutions for like $10-$20 in the next few years.
EDIT: ^^Oh yeah, forgot to mention I needed an Nvidia card to stream to the shield. Although, I guess you don't necessarily need a shield to stream, as you can get the software running on any android device.
I can tell literally just by looking at it that I won't be using any touchpad to control movement. Might as well stick to mobile games with virtual analogs or even better, use a touchpad from a laptop to control my games. It's great for all you rightys, and even you lefties that play everything right handed. I however, am strictly left handed and any righty who thinks i can 'adapt' should try playing counterstrike with the mouse in your left hand sometime.
Nvidia card I have (or, will have). I guess I would get a Steam Link to stream to a TV in my house, a Shield Tablet to stream wherever I go since isn't the Steam Link restricted to the same network, while in theory I could take a Shield Tablet to a friend's house and stream from my PC to his network (despite how bad that could potentially be quality-wise)?
Pretty much what I'm doing. I ordered a steam link despite having a shield. I'm just going to relegate my shield to a PC-portable from now on.
Incidentally, it's funny how similar the PS4 and my PC feel to me now. I have a Playstation TV and a PS Vita for my PS4 as well, which mirrors my PC with it's Steam Link and an Nvidia Shield pretty closely.
I've never ever had to charge a controller while playing, even with the DS4's shit ass battery life.
I'm not dealing with fucking AA batteries in 2015, plain and simple.
And nothing I use uses them either, except the wiimotes I keep around for the cousins, and the tv remote.
you might want to spend some time and learn how this controller works.
I've only watched the trailer, which I watched twice. Can you elaborate?
I really want this. I wonder if I should order at Gamestop or directly from Valve though.
I know lots of people swear by trackballs but I never liked them, and this just seems like another thing that a certain subset of people will really like and I will not. They even say "like a trackball" in the video
I wouldn't be opposed to trying it out, but I'm not gonna shell out $50 for it on a whim that I might maybe like it even though I love my DS4 and mouse/keyboard already.
Yeah I gathered that from the video. I realize it's far more than a normal touchpad but still wont replace analog movement on a controller, which is why they literally added an analog stick to the thing. Again, I can tell by looking this isn't something I"ll ever be able to use comfortably.
Quick question Krejlooc, what setting on Windows would I turn on so that the Steam Link/Nvidia Shield can wake the computer remotely?
Sold at the 24s. mark... Dat cities skyline!
Well, like I said, maybe you'll get lucky and they will release a left handed version.
Hey Krejlooc, just read your detailed post from a few pages back and native mode sounds really intriguing. A few questions: is the native mode available for consumers to fiddle around with or is it only for devs/programmers? Does it require coding or is it a UI based configurator? If, say a dev comes up with a smart new way to play an FPS using native mode, would anyone be able to download that template and play any game with it? Or would it end up being game specific? It sounds like the latter, given anything that isn't a legacy input device needs to be supported directly by the game.
native mode is directly working steam controller support into your game. It is game specific.
I went with Valve. What's the advantage of going with GameStop? In store pick up?
It would be nice if I could swap out or relabel the face buttons to match the Nintendo ABXY layout. I don't do the backwards Xbox layout; I just don't.
native mode is directly working steam controller support into your game. It is game specific.
I would buy that. Any news about if it is PS4 compatible?
I wouldn't buy one JUST for PC. But if i can use on my PS4 too, would be awesome.