38 points

As a steam deck owner and Linux user, its pretty cool to show my friends the Steam Desktop mode, and how Linux works.

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25 points

Didn’t Pornhub see a non-insignificant rise in Linux as well? I wonder how much the steam deck accounted for that as well 😅

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11 points

That seems… awkward. It’s hard enough to hold with one hand, but also trying to navigate at the same time is going to be tricky.

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5 points
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Removed by mod
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3 points

I guess you’d get intimate with your Deck.

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25 points

Yay, linux use was around 1% the beginning of 2023, now it’s so close to 2%, I hope we see an exponential growth by the end of this year.

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18 points

I just switched my aging gaming rig to Linux over the Xmas break. One more grain of sand to add to the pile!

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13 points

Welcome to the linux community.

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16 points
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Only 5-6 years until Linux is at 100% at this rate…

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15 points

In 8 years Linux will be around 500%

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1 point

I switched my laptop EndeavorOS in 2023. Windows 11 was the last straw. Terrible OS.

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22 points

One of my paradoxes, im anticapitalist and I’m greeting valve for their work on steamdeck (not an owner) and proton.
That’s participate to democratize the use of Linux as a daily OS a lot.

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34 points

You can be anticapitalist and still agree with certain companies. Especially when those companies are private, and are not beholden to corrupt shareholders. Private companies are significantly more capable of having and sticking to their morals.

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12 points

They also go down the hole faster once someone with looser ethics takes control.

It’s the paradox of the benevolent dictator, sure they can provide fantastic and quick service to their subjects… but as soon as the ruler is no longer benevolent, it’s just a dictatorship.

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7 points
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Public shareholders are no more corrupt nor less moral than private shareholders, but all of their incentives and information end up being based on more short-term results. Valve is every bit as driven by money as any other company, but they’re thinking long-term, and they believe that there’s more money to be made long-term by treating customers better than their competitors do. That means they release open hardware that isn’t locked down, unlike what their competitors do. They want to mitigate business risk by decoupling PC gaming from a dependency on Microsoft, and all sorts of very capitalist entities mutually benefit from a healthy, usable Linux ecosystem that they can each make work for their own needs.

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3 points

Whether or not public shareholders are more or less moral than private shareholders is not really quantifiable, and neither of us can say with certainty that it is true. I certainly agree that that public shareholders often focus on short term results, but it’s not true all the time. There are public companies that think long term and private companies that think very short term.

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16 points

Being anti capitalist and being in favor of capitalist companies injecting ressources into projects that benefit everyone is compatible imo. Especially when that company does not ask for anything in return and makes the work open source

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7 points

Yeah they did a great job to promote an alternative to windows. They are behind Proton.

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13 points

Let’s give some credit and praise to Codeweavers, the main contributors to WINE, who Valve worked with on Proton.

https://www.codeweavers.com/blog/aeikum/2019/8/20/a-year-since-protons-launch

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3 points

true !

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2 points
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What we hope is for them to continue this approach that is helping both them (detaching from Windows, where they see Microsoft Store as a threat) and the users. Even if in the future there is a chance they might either back down or do less than liked actions, their positive contribution will remain.

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1 point
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14 points

I imagine Linux will cap at about 5% if not lower of overall use.

It’s good to see competition but I just can’t see it picking up much more. Steamdeck only has so many people willing to pick up essentially a console, and PC users aren’t gojng to change for the most part.

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18 points

There’s a good chance there will be a virtuous cycle, where the Steam Deck’s popularity makes it easier to game on Linux for regular PC users too, which will help out everyone gaming on Linux. Especially as Microsoft keeps dicking around with Windows and trying to turn it into a subscription OS and people just get sick of it.

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5 points

Yeah, that’s where that 5% is coming from. Without that virtuous cycle, I’m guessing it would stay between 2-3%. The Steam Deck is cool, but it’s still fairly niche, and many Steam Deck users don’t intend to ever use Linux on their home PCs (e.g. my coworkers that have them).

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