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Valve SteamOS Beta Now Available


Matsuda

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Valve, the game-development studio behind the Half-Life series and the Steam video game marketplace, released the public beta version of its new Linux-based SteamOS on Friday. You can install it right now, provided you have a spare hard drive partition lying around and are unafraid of beta Linux distributions. Oh, and you're running an NVIDIA graphics card.

(Fair warning: we haven’t installed it yet. We should have hands-on impressions up by next week. Read Valve's FAQ here.)

SteamOS is Valve’s new games-first operating system, primarily created for the company’s upcoming Steam Machine hardware—a line of gaming PCs tailored to fit in people’s living rooms. Popular conceptions of PC gaming hold it as more expensive and difficult to set up than standalone games consoles—a stigma Valve hopes to banish by emulating a console-like experience.

While Steam Machines aren’t ready for public consumption (beta hardware just went out Friday to 300 randomly selected participants), the plan is for you to eventually be able to install install SteamOS onto any computer—yes, including the one you already own. For now, however, only computers with an NVIDIA graphics card are supported (Intel and AMD support are promised "soon.")

Should you choose to install the SteamOS beta, we recommend using a new hard drive so you don’t have to worry about partitioning your current one (and remember, alwaysback up your files).

What are the benefits? Price, for one. SteamOS is free for both users and manufacturers. Valve has professed a commitment to openness and accessibility, in light of managing director Gabe Newell’s distaste for Windows 8. Valve also claims “significant performance increases in graphics processing” when running SteamOS.

Possible risks

The fledgling operating system, however, still has some big unknowns. Most worrisome is the tasty Linux core at the heart of SteamOS. While Linux gaming has made significant strides in recent years, developers still predominantly focus on Windows—it’s the largest market, by far. Only a subset of games on the Steam service will run natively on Linux.

Rather than emulate Windows or wrap the game executables, Valve hopes to solve this problem in SteamOS with home streaming—if you own a powerful Windows machine, you can stream game data over your home network and play it on your living room’s SteamOS-enabled system. Of course, this requires owning two computers. Also, until we’ve tried it for ourselves there’s no telling how much lag is introduced in the process—and no telling how much Valve can improve the software side of things before an official SteamOS 1.0 release.

Unfortunately, home streaming didn't make it into this release of SteamOS so you're limited to Linux-native games at the moment.

For now, SteamOS is best saved for the adventurous. Valve warned Wednesday that “unless you’re an intrepid Linux hacker already, we’re going to recommend that you wait until later in 2014 to try it out,” and indeed the installation tips listed in Valve's FAQ require a bit of technical savvy. If you just can't wait, however, you can snag SteamOS for yourself here. The full installer totals 960MB of files (though there's also a 2.4GB system restore).




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While I'm all for this, the availability of games is the main problem. The highest usage for a MacOS version on Steam is less than 2%, and for a Linux version (Ubuntu in this case) is less than half a percent. It's a chicken-and-egg problem - why would large game studios spend massive resources on developing or porting their AAA titles to a platform whose usage on Steam is so low? Also I don't see hardcore gamers being in the least interested in game streaming when they obsess about the minutest of lag and FPS drops. I'm hoping for some good AAA titles for Linux next year (not just for SteamOS), but IMO Valve's best chance of success is to finally announce and make Half-Life 3 a timed Linux/SteamOS exclusive.

Edited by janedoe
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I like the fact that they didn't go Ubuntu and went with Wheezy. It ensures absolute stability. A couple of downsides I see is the fact that its 2.4 GB, I mean I could easily dub it the "The largest well-known Linux distro". The other one is that the fact that being a Wheezy-based distro, it could be rocking an old kernel (3.2) that would cause a lot of incompatibility with newer hardware which will insanely affect a user's experience knowing that they'd have to pick up the latest kernel and such.

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Im not a power user so they'll probably not get that much from me when i try this beta, but i'll definitely give this one a very good look since i am not to fond of the way microsoft has been going wih all these nonsense, most notably this totally idiotic push to eradicate w7 and the complete deskstop environment.

edit:..well nevermind..just saw this on reddit

http://imgur.com/Gsun97X

Edited by khashim
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You hardly needed to wait for the beta of a gaming focused OS to try out Linux. Not that anyone is preventing you from using Win7 for the next two decades if you want, but if you're so irritated with Windows you should have switched to Linux a long time back and enjoyed the benefits of the same.

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