Originally posted by Hamish Wilson
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Steam Linux Usage Still On The Decline
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Originally posted by coder543 View PostPortal was promised to be a release title for Steam on Linux, yet it still isn't here. Where is my Portal? It's really the only Steam game I'm likely to play at any point in the near future, and I already have a copy associated with my Steam account, so any day now would be good.
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Originally posted by coder543 View PostPortal was promised to be a release title for Steam on Linux, yet it still isn't here. Where is my Portal? It's really the only Steam game I'm likely to play at any point in the near future, and I already have a copy associated with my Steam account, so any day now would be good.
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I game exclusively on Linux, in Arch, and have no problems whatsoever. I said bye bye to Window$ last year and haven't regretted it at all.
But I do avoid Ubuntu for that reason. Hopefully they really fix their stuff, like with Compiz and the like, so the newbies will have better experiences.
As for drivers, that will be a problem for a little time yet. It amuses me the lack of understanding people have there though. Windows has enjoyed hardware and just general domination for some time so of course it will have greatest driver support. Apple have their total control thing going and a limited hardware set, so again not a huge deal for them.
No sane person can expect "Linux", if we're referring to it as a desktop OS, to just magically work with everything out of the box, it's not realistic at the moment. If you want to use Linux, prepare to get off your butt and put some effort in and/or help fund support for development. Running back to the Big Two OSes won't help Linux at all, as magical faeries aren't going to magically continue the advance of Linux as a desktop OS, we have to make it so if we desire it to be one.
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Originally posted by ElderSnake View PostI game exclusively on Linux, in Arch, and have no problems whatsoever. I said bye bye to Window$ last year and haven't regretted it at all.
But I do avoid Ubuntu for that reason. Hopefully they really fix their stuff, like with Compiz and the like, so the newbies will have better experiences.
As for drivers, that will be a problem for a little time yet. It amuses me the lack of understanding people have there though. Windows has enjoyed hardware and just general domination for some time so of course it will have greatest driver support. Apple have their total control thing going and a limited hardware set, so again not a huge deal for them.
No sane person can expect "Linux", if we're referring to it as a desktop OS, to just magically work with everything out of the box, it's not realistic at the moment. If you want to use Linux, prepare to get off your butt and put some effort in and/or help fund support for development. Running back to the Big Two OSes won't help Linux at all, as magical faeries aren't going to magically continue the advance of Linux as a desktop OS, we have to make it so if we desire it to be one.
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Originally posted by BO$$ View PostI hear alot of install lubuntu or kubuntu. Why not install Ubuntu and if you don't like unity add kde desktop and xfce desktop? Isn't it the same thing?Last edited by timothyja; 02 May 2013, 10:46 PM.
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Originally posted by timothyja View PostThis is a genuine question. You seem to be telling everyone they need to do something. What are you doing about the situation? Maybe give some options rather than a generic statement. What projects exactly are we meant to help fund? As far as I can tell there are none that work directly toward general improvement of drivers and accept funding.
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Originally posted by timothyja View PostThis is a genuine question. You seem to be telling everyone they need to do something. What are you doing about the situation? Maybe give some options rather than a generic statement. What projects exactly are we meant to help fund? As far as I can tell there are none that work directly toward general improvement of drivers and accept funding.
The driver thing is definitely tricky. NVIDIA, AMD etc are already big commercial companies so throwing extra bits of money at them won't change a whole lot. We already spend hundreds on their GPU's for starters. I think as madjr said above, all we can do is what we're doing so that we can get to the point where these companies take more notice of the platform.
With the FOSS drivers though and projects like Gallium, we can surely always help them out.
The more Greenlit and crowd-funded games we get for Linux the better too.
Personally I try to donate/buy whereever I can and try to spread the word on projects, programs or games or whatever is relevant to me and try to be a bug tester when I have time. Sadly I'm no true programmer so I can't help much in that area. I do think there's an increasingly vocal Linux crowd out there though and that things are mostly on the right track.Last edited by ElderSnake; 02 May 2013, 11:40 PM.
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Originally posted by calim View PostWhat I usually hear from gamers would be: "Steam is on Linux now ? Can I play all my games on Linux then ? No ? Then forget it, I'll stick with Windows."
Even games like ARMA2 run on Linux even with the open-source drivers but STEAM must understand that people want THE STEAM VERSION WITH WINE TECHNIQUE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
All other ways are BULLSHIT!
NATIVE IS COOL BUT ONLY IF ITS POSSIBLE:
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