lol at this guy convincing everyone that steam os is better than any other linux distro.
@beardalaxy
I haven't seen the video, but I actually kinda do agree.
Linux needs a company with a face and a "normie preset for gaming" in order to get any traction. Steam OS will have a professional tech support instead of the usual "supperior geniuses" to solve the most common "user experience" issues.
And once if it does gain traction, switching to other distros won't be such a huge jump anymore.
@LukeAlmighty not this version though. the thing is that in the video he's not talking about steam OS on the deck or anything like that, it's an unofficial version made for other devices. there won't be any official steam support helping you out with it more than likely.
that's the problem here, like why would you pick steam os over any other distro unless you're actually on the deck or another portable device? for desktops and laptops it's probably better to get something like mint or manjaro if you're trying to use arch still.
@beardalaxy
Yeah... I am not a linux expert, so I'll have to trust you on that one.
But Lixus seriously needs a normiefication project.
@LukeAlmighty it pretty much is already there, it just doesn't have advertising. that's what valve is good for, advertising linux, but i wish there wasn't people talking about all these cool "steam os" features that actually just exist everywhere else in linux and are just as if not more accessible.
@beardalaxy
Sorry, but I still have no idea, if my laptop has the correct GPU drivers.
And trying to figure it out was seriously awful.
No, linux in general is still FAR from normie friendly.
@LukeAlmighty i could install a linux distro on any of my roommate's computers or maybe even my mom's or grandparents' computer and they'd be able to use it at the same relative ease they already use windows.
there is still going to be pretty much the same amount of tinkering as there is on windows at this point. two of my roommates i have to help with gaming related stuff every time we play anything and they're on windows 10 and 11 so it's not like linux is going to be any harder for them at that point. fuck, a little while ago everyone was playing a game together while i was at work, and one of them was complaining that his game was running like shit. turns out he had wallpaper engine running on the background and he's on a laptop so it was sucking pretty much all his GPU power. and nobody else at my house could figure that out for some reason???
there are some use cases that linux definitely isn't as good for (or requires a bit more learning for different software) and there are still some drivers around that don't work super well, but that's going to happen in steam os too so it doesn't even support NVIDIA GPUs so like, why recommend it?
most normies though who are just playing games on steam or whatever will notice barely any difference from windows, troubleshooting and all.
the biggest hurdle is probably just needing to learn different software, and that software sometimes being a little bit unwieldy when compared to the stuff on windows or, for things like photography/video editing/music, mac. but for someone who does business/casual stuff on their PC or even gaming i really don't think there's much of a difference and the gap continues to close.
@beardalaxy
I said this many times before, but in my opinion, the main issues are:
That fucking file system
User rights management
That entire "package manager" shit
And now, I discovered, that even commmon drivers are one big hell.
When it comes to "using different programs", I would call that barely an inconvenience, unless it's related to your job directly.
@LukeAlmighty @beardalaxy Whatðs wrong with the FS? Every graphical FM has simple ways to manage permissions. Package managers are one of the best features, wdym? "apt install firefox" "pacman -S firefox", if a normie can use notepad they can use this, otherwise get the GUI for that PM
@applejack @beardalaxy
I know how package managers work, but thank you.
@LukeAlmighty @beardalaxy I know, so I'm having trouble with what you think is wrong with them
Any of theses. These three are direct features that are a very uppfront improvement over windows
@beardalaxy @LukeAlmighty But it's not harder, it's just different and better
There is *no* solution to that other than to just be windows again, what's the point?
~ is not harder than %userprofile%, / is not harder than \\, / for root is not harder than C:\\, and then there are straight up improvements, any char except for / and \0 is allowed, no magic chars or filenames you can't have, there's also virtually no magic junk files like Thumbs.db, its universally UTF-8, I get sent zip files from my uncle and the names are corrupted and that happens between windows users, we have every FS that windows supports plus almost every single one it doesnt, we can mount anything anywhere so my ~/Niðurhal is actually a seperate drive, no D:\\ shenanigans, it just works, formatted USB drives don't have a 4gb filelimit and FILES ARE ACTUALLY CASE SENSITIVE
Last time I had windows legitimatly installed it borked itself during an update too. I've since installed a pirated Russian version that gets no updates with bloatware removed and classic shell preinstalled and it's fine
@beardalaxy @LukeAlmighty I know but that's the default for USB drives most of the times. It works with basically everything, it's even reccomended for EUFI installs on Linux for /boot because BIOSes universally know it
I wouldn't doubt exFAT has become more popular now since people buy USBs to put movies and such on but it's still always worth formatting it with something better anyway
@applejack @LukeAlmighty minor nitpick but the 4gb file limit thing is just with fat32, windows supports exfat. i remember the good ol' days when you had to split dual-layer wii games though in order to have them on a usb drive. good times. there was even a version of brawl that had everything but multiplayer scrubbed out so it would fit on one disc and thus let you copy it onto a usb drive xD
such a weird arbitrary limit. apparently it was only 4gb because they thought that people wouldn't ever need to copy files bigger than that. a lot of computer design stuff was really not very forward thinking. like ipv4 or the whole y2k thing. like why the fuck wouldn't you program your computer to be okay turning to the number 2000 after 1999? people deadass had to work around the clock at the 11th hour to fix that xD