The north folk and the south folk.
The north folk and the south folk.
I should say that that’s a fairly recent news article talking about the next FSR in development.
As to if we need it … I don’t know, we certainly managed a long time without AI everything!
I hate to say it, but FSR4 is AI powered https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/amd-plans-for-fsr4-to-be-fully-ai-based-designed-to-improve-quality-and-maximize-power-efficiency
Mission successful? … he infiltrated pretty darn deep
Polish złoty - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_złoty
And it’s just the Steam UI language, not the games language.
Great point, except you’ve completely failed to show how any of the alternatives are better.
Epic, GoG, Microsoft store, if Steam is so awful, then why don’t people use the competition?
There’s really no penalty to me as a consumer if I choose to buy on any platform, they all work on Windows, and to a lesser extent Steam OS. I’m not locked on hardware, there no subscription, the biggest challenge is keeping all 4 app stores updated to the latest version which costs me a little time and storage space…
Actually, dlc is a good example of being trapped in one ecosystem, but beyond that I can buy games from any publisher on any store without penalty.
Compare that to Apple and their restrictive app store, or other innovators that stop supporting hardware upgrades or disable servers removing key features (Unisoft…) Steam even goes further and provides users access to games that have been withdrawn from sale, compare that with Nintendo.
Like Apple’s vr headset? Or did you forget the first 2 Valve VR (HTC hardware) sets and associated software?
What about the Steam Deck, of course hand held consoles are nothing new, but what makes it special is the combination of the rather excellent trackpads and controller mapping that debuted in the Steam controller and with an OS (that uses wine) to bypass Windows and all it’s bloat - It must be quite popular as we’re now seeing a number of imitators!
Imho Steam is, by far, the gold standard for digital distributors.
So as a developer I could release my software on Steam directly (no publisher and associated costs) and have access to how many potential customers? Of course I could also release on my own website and host everything myself, or I could use the Epic Store, perhaps GOG.
How do you think Steam store restricts the industry? I can buy steam keys on alternative sites, is that possible in Epic or GOG?
https://partner.steamgames.com/doc/features/keys
Steam Keys are a free service we provide to developers as a convenient tool to help you sell your game on other stores and at retail, or provide for free for beta testers or press/influencers.
As a customer the steam store experience, mod workshop, Steam deck and OS, Steam VR app (I use with my Quest 2) all work really well for me. Reviews seem pretty uncensored (at least I’ve not read about Valve doing anything underhand)
I’m very happy to say that the Steam android app could be better!
As a final point, I would like to see a viable alternative to Steam as competition is generally good for consumers!
Fair point, however everyone (just about) has either an android or apple phone. Not everyone plays computer games.
That’s a very good idea
This is neat solution, you’ll lose the laptop WiFi internet access though.
You can set the pi to connect to the phone WiFi by editing files on the SD card (using your laptop)
https://desertbot.io/blog/headless-raspberry-pi-4-ssh-wifi-setup-64-bit-mac-windows
SteamOS struggles/struggled to support some online gaming due to anti cheat. I think that’s why the support is mentioned.
Because the old law is still applicable in some situations and now the prosecution potentially has 2 options to choose from …
I don’t know the real answer but I’d guess it’s a mix of “if ain’t broke don’t fix it” and the cost of removing the law (time debating in parliament) that could be better spent.
Pi4 with 2TB SSD running:
HDMI cable straight to the living room Smart TV (which is not connected to the internet).
Other devices access media (TV shows, movies, books, comics, audiobooks) using VLC DLNA. Except for e-readers which just use the Calibre web UI.
Main router is flashed with OpenWrt and running DNS adblocker. Ethernet running to 2nd router upstairs and to main PC. Small WiFi repeater with ethernet in the basement. It’s not a huge house, but it does have old thick walls which are terrible for WiFi propogation.
Latency in this case would be the time it takes for your device to ask the raspberry pi what IP address is www.google.com and the pi will reply to the device with the IP address.
I think you might be misunderstanding how the pi hole blocks adverts. It doesn’t filter http traffic by looking at the contents but instead has a block list of domains that server adverts. When a device on your network requests the IP address for a blocked domain PiHole just replies with a fake IP (or nothing, I’m not sure)
This link mentions typical request is 512 bytes or less. https://pi-hole.net/blog/2017/05/24/how-much-traffic-can-pi-hole-handle/
This link mentions 250 uses on a single pi hole. https://www.reddit.com/r/pihole/comments/5jpavc/how_many_users_can_pihole_handle_with_a_raspi_3/
If I understand correctly Pi hole works as a DNS service so I don’t think the bandwidth (100mb) is an issue.
You’re not routing all the network data through the Pi.
The issue is wether the Pi can run fast enough to process all your lookup requests.
Someone asked Microsoft AI to create a meme, and that’s basically what it outputted. I’ll try and find the link.
Windows 10 gang here. If I wait a few years I’m sure 11 will be usable by the time 10 support ends.
Same with buying pc games.