- Feb 22, 2008
- 2,846
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I love the idea of SteamOS, and ditching windows altogether. Over the past few years, Linux had made great strides, and more and more of what I do is browser based, and I dont need to use certain apps anymore (office). All that being said, I still am cautious about getting rid of windows. It always comes down to one or two things that I can't live without.
As of right now if SteamOS were out, these are my top reasons for not being able to switch:
windows only games - I'd imagine this is a pretty big one for a lot of people. I know they mentioned you can stream them from your other computer, but that doesn't really solve the problem as you would still have to have a windows computer in the house. Even if 5 or so years down the road all major titles are released on linux, you would still be missing out on the hundreds or thousands of older games that will never get linux support. Even valve themselves are going back and porting ALL their games, so you know no one else is going to either. Even it this were the only reason, it would be a big enough reason to me that I would at the very least need to dual boot incase I ever wanted to play any of my older games.
I think the only possible solution is a gaikai type streaming option for people who strictly run steamOS. I dont know how happy PC gamers would be about this considering the lag you would see, but for me I really wouldnt mind if there were some lag in xcom/civ/etc.
Either that or they would have to come up with their own WINE type environment that would allow you to play windows games in linux, I think this is a long shot though.
Windows Media Center - Ive been using a HD homerun prime for about two years now and I cant recommend it enough. Its hooked up to my network, so any computer or laptop running windows just has to boot into media center to watch cable TV. Also any xbox in the house also works as an extender, so theres that. I know that this device supports other OSes, but Ive tried it and it was a pretty bad experience. I cant stress enough how much better this is than any other way to watch TV.
On the other hand, I barely watch anything on cable besides sports, but my roomates do, so its kind of important.
Sound/video management I have a pretty complicated setup in my living room/basement. My computer is hooked up to a 56" upstairs through HDMI (sound through HDMI as well), and also hooked up to a projector downstairs via DVI, and sound goes out through stereo. Right now it works flawlessly, and the sound automatically goes to whatever screen is on. Ive tried Linux a while ago on it and could not get it to work. I realize this problem is very specific to me, but its just an example of something that will end up giving you a problem in linux that can be worked out in windows.
MS office - Not a huge deal anymore (for me), but I would imagine for some this would be a deal breaker.
Netflix - Does this finally work right on linux? Havent tried it in years
VSO convertXtoDVD - best dvd burning program by far. There has been nothing close IMO.
Xpadder - Is there an alternative? I use it for a few games
Cloud Services - Are all compatible with linux? (not sure if all are supported yet - drive, skydrive, amazon cloud)
wireless support - Ive always had trouble with wireless driver performance in linux. Ill be using a wired connection, but having wifi/bluetooth issues is a PITA.
Emulators - I have every emulator installed for when I want to play some older games, I dont think they are all supported in linux. I dont think dolphin is supported at all, and even if it was I doubt the wiimote would work.
Filesystem support If you end up dual booting, you might be in trouble if your using a shared folder for media. For example I have a large partition for TV shows and stuff, and I dont think I would be able to write to it in windows.
Remote Desktop - I use splashtop to use my pc from my phone/tablet (and watch tv and attempt to play games on, games haven't worked great yet). Also Im not sure how chrome remote works in linux.
Fitbit - Started using this a few months ago, no linux support.
And some other things to consider: GFWL(kinda goes with windows games), photoshop, you need a budget (been meaning to use this), silverlight (netflix), logitech software for keyboards/mice/controllers.
These are just some things that pop into my head when I think about what Ill be missing by switching to linux. Im sure i left some out, and maybe some i listed are no longer issues, but as someone who really wants to get behind this idea, most of these issues will have to be addressed by the time SteamOS is ready for mainstream.
Also one more thing to consider is, what would be the advantage of steamOS vs ubuntu running steam? Id imagine any features SteamOS has, ubuntu could also have, plus you would have a newer OS every 6 months, and whatever features Ubuntu offers. This is assuming steamOS might be locked down in some way to make the platform more stable.
Please feel free to correct me if any of my rambling is incorrect. What do you guys think about it?
As of right now if SteamOS were out, these are my top reasons for not being able to switch:
windows only games - I'd imagine this is a pretty big one for a lot of people. I know they mentioned you can stream them from your other computer, but that doesn't really solve the problem as you would still have to have a windows computer in the house. Even if 5 or so years down the road all major titles are released on linux, you would still be missing out on the hundreds or thousands of older games that will never get linux support. Even valve themselves are going back and porting ALL their games, so you know no one else is going to either. Even it this were the only reason, it would be a big enough reason to me that I would at the very least need to dual boot incase I ever wanted to play any of my older games.
I think the only possible solution is a gaikai type streaming option for people who strictly run steamOS. I dont know how happy PC gamers would be about this considering the lag you would see, but for me I really wouldnt mind if there were some lag in xcom/civ/etc.
Either that or they would have to come up with their own WINE type environment that would allow you to play windows games in linux, I think this is a long shot though.
Windows Media Center - Ive been using a HD homerun prime for about two years now and I cant recommend it enough. Its hooked up to my network, so any computer or laptop running windows just has to boot into media center to watch cable TV. Also any xbox in the house also works as an extender, so theres that. I know that this device supports other OSes, but Ive tried it and it was a pretty bad experience. I cant stress enough how much better this is than any other way to watch TV.
On the other hand, I barely watch anything on cable besides sports, but my roomates do, so its kind of important.
Sound/video management I have a pretty complicated setup in my living room/basement. My computer is hooked up to a 56" upstairs through HDMI (sound through HDMI as well), and also hooked up to a projector downstairs via DVI, and sound goes out through stereo. Right now it works flawlessly, and the sound automatically goes to whatever screen is on. Ive tried Linux a while ago on it and could not get it to work. I realize this problem is very specific to me, but its just an example of something that will end up giving you a problem in linux that can be worked out in windows.
MS office - Not a huge deal anymore (for me), but I would imagine for some this would be a deal breaker.
Netflix - Does this finally work right on linux? Havent tried it in years
VSO convertXtoDVD - best dvd burning program by far. There has been nothing close IMO.
Xpadder - Is there an alternative? I use it for a few games
Cloud Services - Are all compatible with linux? (not sure if all are supported yet - drive, skydrive, amazon cloud)
wireless support - Ive always had trouble with wireless driver performance in linux. Ill be using a wired connection, but having wifi/bluetooth issues is a PITA.
Emulators - I have every emulator installed for when I want to play some older games, I dont think they are all supported in linux. I dont think dolphin is supported at all, and even if it was I doubt the wiimote would work.
Filesystem support If you end up dual booting, you might be in trouble if your using a shared folder for media. For example I have a large partition for TV shows and stuff, and I dont think I would be able to write to it in windows.
Remote Desktop - I use splashtop to use my pc from my phone/tablet (and watch tv and attempt to play games on, games haven't worked great yet). Also Im not sure how chrome remote works in linux.
Fitbit - Started using this a few months ago, no linux support.
And some other things to consider: GFWL(kinda goes with windows games), photoshop, you need a budget (been meaning to use this), silverlight (netflix), logitech software for keyboards/mice/controllers.
These are just some things that pop into my head when I think about what Ill be missing by switching to linux. Im sure i left some out, and maybe some i listed are no longer issues, but as someone who really wants to get behind this idea, most of these issues will have to be addressed by the time SteamOS is ready for mainstream.
Also one more thing to consider is, what would be the advantage of steamOS vs ubuntu running steam? Id imagine any features SteamOS has, ubuntu could also have, plus you would have a newer OS every 6 months, and whatever features Ubuntu offers. This is assuming steamOS might be locked down in some way to make the platform more stable.
Please feel free to correct me if any of my rambling is incorrect. What do you guys think about it?
