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Comment Re:No not really (Score 1) 201

It's 300 Linux games on Steam. This doesn't count any non-steam games.

Valve is also putting their weight behind this and getting other developers to release their games for Steam OS (and Linux). Metro Last Light is one of the most recent AAA titles. Check for yourself the current steam Linux catalog (hint, you won't find Free Civ on there).

As far as the OS, it's a component in the (not yet released) Steam Machines. When released, consumers will be able to pick one up for $499 pre-built, with a Steam controller .

The OS *by itself* is aimed at fans, early adopters, beta testers, whatever you want to call them. However it's just one part of a larger puzzle that Valve has been putting together piece by piece over the past few years (SteamOS + Controller + Steam Machines + Big Picture Mode + Family Sharing + Trading Cards + Achievements + Social + Steam Workshop + Porting Source to Linux + Optimizing Linux AMD/nVidia/intel drivers + Porting the Steam Client to Linux).

Come January the pieces come together.

Comment Re:No not really (Score 3, Informative) 201

How many of those 9,000 windows steam games run on the consoles? (BTW it's closer to 3,000 - 3,500 unique windows games - excluding DLC).

Somebody that already has a gaming PC (presumably with Steam) isn't the target demographic of this push. Folks who want console level convenience but would be open to saving money buying on Steam are. And what will they see when Steam Machines launch early next year?

PS4 169 Total Games released and announced
XBONE 77 Total Games released and announced
Steam Machine 300+ games already released (and purchasable) *and* more coming soon.

Then look at the other features you'll get with a Steam Machine (and Steam):

* Steam Sales

* Steam gifting (give your grandkids a Steam Machine then send them games through steam from your home PC/Tablet/Phone, etc)

* Access to player mods (Steam Workshop)

* Free online play (MMO's w/ monthly fees not included)

* Equal or better hardware depending on your budget

* Upgradeable hardware

* Made with COTS HW -> easily fixable

* Games you purchased on your Steam Machine are tied to your account, *not* your machine. On the road? Open your laptop and pick up on your games where you left off.

* Ability to play 3rd party/unlicensed titles without jailbreaking

* Compatibility with PC hardware (that works with Linux). Mouse and KB anyone?

* Compatibility with XBOX 360 and PS3 controllers (and surely XBOne and PS4 to come)

* Full desktop mode!

* Controller that's nearly as precise as using a mouse (and miles ahead of the console controlers.

* Devs can issue patches for free! (looking at you Microsoft)

 

Comment Re:Increasingly irrelevant tech dinosaur.. (Score 1) 182

My first android phone (G1 - 2008 ) had better specs than the beast of a computer I built in 1998) for 1/10th the price!

1998 - Pentium II 300 PC w/ Hitachi 17" monitor $5500
MIPS: 380
Ram: 128 MB
Storage: 6GB SCSI drive + 1GB Jaz drive
Screen: 1600 x 1200 24 bit color
Networking: Ethernet + 56k modem
Other Accessories: Cheapo microphone
Other Benefits: Upgradeable. Built in anti-theft (heavy as hell).

2008 - G1 $480 + $20 (SD card)
MIPS: 630
RAM: 192 MB
Storage: 192 MB + SD (8GB)
Screen: 320 x 480 16 bit color (only spec it really loses on)
Networking: Wifi + GPRS + EDGE
Other Accessories: Camera, GPS, accelerometer, compass, microphone
Other Benefits: Fits in the palm of my frikkin' hand! Makes calls!

That phone was my "Holy shit, I'm living in the future!" moment. Don't get me started on the current smart phones out now.

Comment Re:lower insurance? (Score 4, Funny) 449

The car owner walks out with their family, a suitcase full of whatever clothes they can gather, food for the trip, toys, and of course the family albums.

A sudden panic overtakes him as he realizes his car is no longer where he left it. He frantically looks up and down the street to no avail. Finally he pickups up his phone to call the police when he sees a message:

Message from: FamilyCarAutodrive. Received at 8:01pm. "I told you motherfuckers I was out of here at 8'o'clock!"

Comment Re:90s again? (Score 3, Informative) 80

There was a lot of hype about VR stuff in the 90s, and the whole thing did not get much traction.

They're developing consumer versions that are far superior (and cheaper) than the $1000 minimum 256 color, low FoV junk from the 90's (looking at you VFX-1!). Better, professional units quickly went up to the 10s of thousands of dollars.

Are things significantly better now?

The reason why it's better now is due to cheap high resolution displays (thanks to phones and tablets) and precise accelerometers and gyros.

On the Occulus Rift side, they sidestepped the old design requiring two separate screens by using one screen split between your two eyes and using optics to make the narrow (per eye) screen appear wide. Also the optics concentrate more pixels in the center of your field of view (where you need them most). The distortions created by this are counteracted in software. So this new approach + cheaper displays + cheaper sensors = time for cheap and awesome consumer VR headsets!

Comment Re:All I can say to that is... (Score 2) 119

splitting the cost of all of it between four guys for 8-10 months was reasonable

Seems reasonable. And for short term stuff (table for thanksgiving, big TV for Superbowl, bed for temporary guests, etc) it's fine. However the vast majority of people don't use it like this.

That said at 8 months (and a usual term of 24 months Rent to Own) you've paid up 8/24 = 1/3rd of the inflated cost. So for my example of the living room set, you and your roommates would have paid $1000 of a $1500 (full retail) living room set. At 10 months you would have paid $1250 (sale price for the item at a regular furniture store).

If you must have "new" stuff and you don't want to deal with selling/donating it at the end of the school year then it'll work. However if you don't mind used, you can furnish an entire (temporary/first) apartment for much less and make back some money at the end by re-selling or donating (and getting a tax break).

As an example my roommate and I furnished our apartment with about $200 from the salvation army, $100 for my waterbed (no bed bugs!), and whatever he spent on his bed. The $200 from the Salvation Army got us a living room set, entertainment center, desks, second couch (we went during the weekend auctions). At the end we just re-donated the stuff.

Comment Re:All I can say to that is... (Score 5, Informative) 119

It's a rent to own store and from a brief stint working in one (quite a few years ago) I can say that most of the clients were people who had bad credit and too poor or unable to save enough to buy *new* furniture/electronics outright.

How it works? They take full MSRP (which usually gives you 100% markup) double *that* price then divide up into payments. So as an example a living room set with a $1500 MSRP (which probably cost them $700) would end up being $125 a month OR $57.70 a week (Easy Payments!). If the customer paid through the two years required to own it they would have paid $3000 for a couch they could have gotten for sale elsewhere for about $1200.

The horrendous markup is more visible in electronics (a PS2 in it's day would have cost someone close to $1000 by the end of the year rent-to-own period).

You are totally correct. The best situation for a consumer in that situation is to get furniture from either Goodwill, the Salvation Army, Craigslist, or the local newspaper classifieds. If they still want *new* furniture, then they can enjoy the used stuff till they save enough to buy what they really want outright (and re-sell the used item).

Working that job made me realize that schools *must* have a personal finances class which goes over budgeting, avoiding scams, and setting up an affordable household.

Comment Re:Don't compare it to gamepads. (Score 1) 139

This is exactly it. It's designed to be as comfortable and easy to hold as a gamepad, but get as close to mouse + keyboard precision. There are Linux drivers for the PS3 Six-axis or Dual Shock 3 and XBOX 360 controllers (which should work just fine in Steam OS).

People criticizing this for *not* copying the tried and true gamepad design (two analog sticks, 1 d-pad, 4 side buttons, etc) are like people critiquing a pickup truck or sports car for not seating 4 and having enough room for all their groceries.

Sidenote - for thoese banging their heads against the wall trying to use a PS3 DS3 controller in windows using motion joy this guy made an awesome alternative that I got working with two controllers and works just peachy with Steam Big Picture .

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