Valve will finally let you build your own Steam Machine with SteamOS for desktop
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https://www.theverge.com/games/953411/valve-steamos-desktop-nvidia
Valve is making its SteamOS Linux distribution compatible with more desktop hardware, including Nvidia graphics, so you can build your own Steam Machine.
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In a world of big company bad, I feel like Valve often strikes a fair balance.
Just don’t look too closely at how they are benefiting from and pushing (likely illegal) gambling.
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Oh. Neat
Plenty of the Linux YouTubers have been rolling their eyes when people treat SteamOS as an option, so it’ll be interesting to watch their opinions 180 (or not).
I roll my eyes when I see people saying they’ll leave Windows when they can run SteamOS, considering there are other distros that are just as good or better. But the brand name recognition will definitely bring some people.
Yeah… I have to sheepishly raise my hand as one of those people, previously. I finally converted last year because Valve was taking too long.
My justification in waiting was that Valve (being behind Proton) would have a vested interest in making sure that support was top-notch, and not just best effort like you find in some of those niche gaming distros.
Honestly, the arguing about distros is a big reason I don’t move to Linux. I want something well supported and going to stick around, but all I ever hear are new names come up every 5 minutes and I can’t help but assume contributors are just dropping off left and right for other distros.
Steam being an actual company behind a distro gives at least an impression of support stability because they have a economical incentive to kind of keep it going.
Is any of this actually true? No, and I know in my heart of the cards it isn’t, but choice paralysis is getting real, and 30k distros to choose from don’t help.
Canonical (Kubuntu) and Red Hat (Fedora, I suggest the KDE variant) are very big and old companies if that’s what you want.
I would say debian is more equivalent to red hat being a core distro with no upstream while ubuntu (wierd to me you use kubuntu) uses debian as its upstream.
Debian is too slow with updates for gaming. Idk why not having an upstream is desired, SteamOS has Arch as an upstream. And I was suggesting Red Hat the company and Fedora KDE the distro.
Why is it weird to prefer Kubuntu? Ubuntu is just not as good, it pushes Snaps harder, and it uses GNOME which I don’t like either. I just like Kubuntu a lot more than Ubuntu, and I think many other gamers would agree. Also SteamOS uses KDE Plasma, so it’s the same (except Kubuntu is more up to date, especially with Backports)
I think Kubuntu should be the more popular one, and Ubuntu should be the one that is weird to say.
Not the person you are replying to, but it’s interesting to suggest Kubuntu without mentioning Ubuntu.
Its not wierd to prefer kubuntu. I don’t prefer ubuntu or redhat its just that if your talk long time distros redhat and debian are some of the originals and ubuntu and such use them as a base like bazzite does with redhat. I say ubuntu because its the original and core canonical prodcut where as kubuntu is a variation. Your preferences were not wierd to me just the examples for someone worried about linux things not having a long enough and active enough history included an original, long term, core distro and then a more modern one that is downstream a core one. So it was a bit disparate.
I run both of those (Kubuntu on the desktop, Fedora KDE in a laptop) and either one is a good option.
Red Hat, Canonical and Novel aren’t going anywhere. That’s fedora, *buntu and Suse.
I get it, though. The ease of updates is really enticing despite distros like bazzite being better in about every other way.
What are you talking about, if ease of updates is a concern then it literally does not get better than bazzite. You don’t even notice that updates are happening, that’s how easy they are
I already have my laptop on a different distro. I’ve been waiting for Steam OS for my gaming PC because it will be the easiest to game on, and for the guaranteed popularity it will be easy to find fixes for compatibility on any games and work well with my steam deck and it will have the biggest force behind it to have games work well on their Linux distro.
You can roll your eyes all you want, but the fact is, you’re going to find out you’re kind of full of shit. Almost anyone who just wants a gaming PC without windows is going to use this distro and with valves resources and popularity it will be the best distro to game on. It would be a bit silly to think otherwise.
SteamOS is already not the best gaming distro. Besides I never said it would be bad, I just said it’s silly to be sticking with Windows 11 because you’re waiting for SteamOS, and people have been saying this for years still waiting and waiting. It’s less silly now that we might actually be closer to the release date.
You never specified 11. I stayed on 10. Lol
I had assumed that Steam wouldn’t do this, partly because they wouldn’t want to deal with supporting Linux beginners, but they certainly have the resources to do so if they are willing to.
I don’t know if them releasing it for a bigger audience necessarily means they’ll support it. Might very well be that they’ll rely on the community for that.
Well previously it was the fact that it was very AMD centric. Linux can easily support anything of course. But for something that you just want to install and work. Steam OS was made with AMD in mind. You could get Nvidia to work with enough faphing about. But it was discouraged and not default. Enabling it by default could theoretically be less work for Valve. And a value add for the software as a whole.
Before this, said YouTubers were right. It wasn’t designed for General use and would cause a lot of problems for people just trying to get into it. Valve changing their support absolutely will change all of this. But it was never guaranteed.
I don’t know about youtubers, but as far as I know SteamOS wasn’t meant to be installed on non-deck devices, being distributed only as updates (not sure how those work) and recovery images for reinstalling on your deck, with no support or even instructions for installing it elsewhere.
It’s not about SteamOS being stupid, it’s about it not even being meant to be an option - it had less support than those “random” other distros.
paywall, so no idea what changed, but the official install instruction don’t list nvidia anywhere, just beta support for AMD discrete GPUs
https://help.steampowered.com/en/faqs/view/65B4-2AA3-5F37-4227
I’m already running SteamOS on my 7800x3d and 7900XTX PC.
From my perspective, SteamOS is more marketing than anything else. There are several very good distros for gaming, that aren’t bundled with Steam. What does anyone need SteamIS for? Am I wrong to think it’s just for Windows users who think it’s the only usable Linux distro?
Yeah. It feels like Sony advertising Playstation OS for PC hardware.
Like what is the actualndifference between Steam OS.and Big Picture Mode, really.
It’s absolutely marketed as a safe Linux alternative to SteamOS. Let them at it. Accessibility and ease of use are long-held concerns for Windows users migrating to Linux.
I’m only familiar with gaming on Linux through the Steam Deck. Do these other distros include the same Proton as SteamOS? Because that’s been a boon to getting my Windows games running on it.
proton comes with steam, no matter what distro!
You basically already could either through hoop jumping, or just bazzite as the easy route for feature parity plus extras.
That’s probably why the article says
…
Skip paywall: https://archive.ph/f0MP3
But will they also release half-life 3?
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I assume this is in response to the backlash to Steam hardware pricing?
Doubt. SteamOS has been freely available for many years.
Only through third party hackery not officially supported by valve.