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WTF

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  • Any company advertising on X, buying Teslas, using SpaceX, etc is okay with working with Nazis.

    That needs to be the message here. Make it clear to all his business associates that we will not forget how they react.

  • She's gonna have some Hillary-like issues, in that the GOP has spent a decade demonizing her already.

    Obama hit them hard because they didn't see him coming. He went from a relative unknown (on the national stage) to the Presidency in about 12 seconds, and they had been prepping for a fight against Hillary even then.

  • Steam games are also 100% a license, and Steam has both removed the ability to download previously-purchased games and removed games from people's libraries in the past.

    And my main route to Steam AND Gamepass is my ROG Ally, since it's basically a Deck that runs Windows, so it has greater game and marketplace compatibility.

  • Yes, a PC can do more. That isn't a positive for lots of people.

    I have a small tractor with all kinds of implements. I can dig with the backhoe, grade with the box blade, cut grass with the mowing deck, clear brush with the bush hog, do all kinds of crap with the loader bucket, move brush with the forks, and much more.

    I also have to know how to attach, maintain, and use all of those tools and the tractor itself if it's going to be useful.

    For someone wanting to just mow their lawn on their 1/4 acre of land, a push-mower is all they want or need.

  • First off, Steam has LOTS of hands that aren't connotation with the deck. The storefronts on the other consoles don't have that problem.

    Secondly, the Steam Deck is a dedicated gaming machine that runs a custom OS designed for gaming, had limited upgradablity, so users will just have to wait for the next generation for anything but a storage upgrade, didn't work with lots of PC games because of its operating system, and is designed and sold by the company that runs its storefront.

    How is the Steam Deck not a console?

  • Yes. The Steam Deck.

    A dedicated piece of hardware with limited upgradablity designed and sold by the company that runs the marketplace/launcher/operating system that can't run all games because of its OS, but performs beyond its specs because developers are designing products with is exact, known specifications in mind.

    How is the deck not a console?

  • "Just pick one of the top 10 distros" is in itself greek to most people. You exist in a bubble where everyone knows what a linux distro even is. 90% of people do not. Your simple, overly-simplistic description of how to do Linux gaming can't make it one sentence without losing normal people who just want to play a fucking game without having to learn anything new.

  • How is it substantially different from an everyday "I just want to play a goddamned game without jumping through hoops" perspective.

    Is the person who doesn't want to go through the trouble of activating dev mode and download an emulator or other custom software more likely to install a different operating system on their Deck?

  • The Steam Deck is a huge part of the rise, and it's essentially a console. It's a specific dedicated, known piece of hardware that can't be meaningfully upgraded.

    It launches into a custom OS designed for gaming using a launcher and game marketplace under the control of the manufacturer from which the manufacturer takes a 30% cut of all sales.

    But that marketplace is also a PC gaming marketplace, so all its sales count as PC gaming growth.

    It can, of course, run other software, but the dev mode on the Xbox lets it do the same thing. So if the deck isn't a console, neither is the Xbox.

  • I work in municipal government.

    Microsoft does have a separate government- specific subscription with slightly different features, and that may be part of it.

    The most annoying part of the government system is that it only allows one MS account to be logged in on a mobile device, so for people with accounts in multiple municipalities (e.g. county officials needing access to permitting data from several cities), they need a different device for each system.

  • So what you're saying is that people who aren't interested in fucking around with Linux shouldn't play games, even if they have absolutely zero interest in fucking around with Linux?

    Let periods enjoy hobbies the way they want to. All that setup shit that's easy for you isn't easy for everyone, and learning more computer stuff isn't something their interested in. They want to play a goddamned game, and they can unbox a Nintendo, plug in the game, power cable, and hdmi plug and be playing a game in less than 2 minutes.

    That's what they want. Their gaming hobby consists of playing the games. For many of us, all the setup and tinkering is part of the hobby, but we're the outliers.

  • You're asking a lot from the average non- computer person.

    Things that are "just do this simple thing" for you are specifically what people don't want to spend time fucking around with.

    If you were buying a car with zero knowledge about cars and how they work, and the only purpose of the car was to get you from "a" to "b", would you buy one that required you to install the engine and calibrate the timing yourself, or the one that you could get in and drive?

  • Deli slicer aren't all commercial.

    I have a $60 deli slicer on the counter. I also have chef's knives that cost way more.

    The knives can do everything the slicer can, but the untrained person can slice meat faster and neater with the slicer. They don't need to k ow how to use a knife properly or how to sharpen a blade. It just works.

    That's a console. They're cheaper than PCs that can run equivalent games for a lot of their lifespan, and they're specialist devices that just fucking work.

    But they can't run cad, use excel, or do anything else but play games and videos just like a deli slicer can't debone a chicken.

  • It wasn't just storage. A 2005 PC can't handle TR on minimum settings. 360 handled it on what was essentially medium despite being a less powerful machine because the devs were able to optimize for that specific hardware instead of trying to guess.

    You know, like they're doing with the Steam Deck, which is absolutely a console.

  • I've never run across any of that. There must be some implementation issue that affects some companies and not others, because the 2 places I've worked since Teams took over everything have been flawless on all of that (except for Linux- and I really don't care about that from a business perspective where everyone is going to use Windows).