Great! More competition is a good thing.
I wish media outlets would stop pretending that mobile devices running Windows are rivals to the steam deck, though. A very large portion of the deck’s magic comes from SteamOS, which has loads of things built into it to benefit mobile gaming. Streamlined game updates, low overhead OS, quick booting, quick suspend/sleep, custom control hardware, and more.
All these devices running Windows are just laptops in a less versatile form factor. That’s all well and good, but I don’t see how they really have much to do with the steam deck except for the fact that they’re portable and have a built in controller of some sort.
Why do they not embrace SteamOS?
Because it’s still not really available.
Valve said they want to partner with companies to support it on other devices. Guess they haven’t taken up Valve’s offer for whatever reason. They should also have more faith on just how well proton works.
the problem is, supporting more than just 1 hardware spec is very difficult. im not just talking about their SOC, but the controller parts, the networking devices, all of the things that can be more temperamental on linux than it is on windows. and that’s without considering the long list of games that don’t work, and probably never will, for various reasons out of valves control.
Driver support is easier on Linux, and again I think you misunderstand how well Proton works.
You’d have to be utterly mad to think driver support is easier on Linux. Most of the time it’s either it exists or it doesn’t. And since obscure hardware is generally moved by interest, the answer to issues is usually “Why don’t you code it?”
This is a huge step from the drivers just straight up existing at all on windows. Usually the drivers that compete/surpass windows are for both popular projects, and projects where the information is generally available (hence why Radeon card drivers are fairly good, and Nvidia has been an ongoing battle)
This is all to say that yes, having a company backing the hardware’s drivers helps a lot, so the point of supporting more than 1 hardware spec is a very good point.
I don’t think anyone who daily drives Linux understands how annoying getting virtually anything to run properly on that platform is, if you can get it to run at all. It doesn’t support most keyboard/mouse software, it doesn’t support any anticheat for any major games, and it’s chronic use of CLI means that it can never get a large enough amount of users to become a viable platform. The only way that Linux users will get platform support is if someone actually makes a windows level user experience, and Ubuntu is still nowhere near that bar all these years later. If I can’t use the things I use everyday on windows, on Linux without hitting the command line once, it’s not happening for the general public.
it doesn’t support any anticheat for any major games
That’s pretty strongly worded - I know Bungie and Epic (Fortnite only) have both refused, but I consider quite a few of the many games that do support anti-cheat on Proton to be major https://areweanticheatyet.com/table/1/?search=&sortOrder=&sortBy=status
How about you just make more laptops first…it’s been week after week of no stock on 15inch L and T series…and the one or two models that do show up, are priced 500-800 more then they should be
R&D != production
So …supply and demend?
Well, if they’re consistently out of stock, supply isn’t meeting demand. Hence the comment
Please just make think pads upgradeable again.