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Cedega 5.0 Released

kormoc writes "Transgaming has released a large update to Cedega. This release (5.0) changes how the entire product works, merging the GUI with the actual program, as well as implementing features such as pixel shadier 1.4 support, in order to get games such as battlefield 2 working. The release notes list all the new improvements as well as the newly supported games. This seems to be the best release to date and expands the feature set to work with a large number of new games."

16 of 289 comments (clear)

  1. Pixel Shadier? by plover · · Score: 5, Funny
    features such as pixel shadier 1.4 support

    So exactly what is a shady pixel, and how does a pixel become shadier? Are there degrees of shadiness?

    Let's say you have two pixels: one pixel threatens people on the sidewalk for money, and the other pixel runs a numbers racket. Which one is shadier?

    --
    John
    1. Re:Pixel Shadier? by panth0r · · Score: 4, Funny

      Maybe one of the pixels graduated to becming a "gangsta"? While the rest are all just "thugs" tryin' to keep up da image, yo!

      --
      I like suggestions, but I don't like contributing towards them.
    2. Re:Pixel Shadier? by eno2001 · · Score: 4, Funny

      No. I think you are thinking of the rather out of fashion "Slim Shadier".

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    3. Re:Pixel Shadier? by hunterx11 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Will the real Pixel Shady please stand up?

      --
      English is easier said than done.
  2. Re:Behind the scenes tech? by et764 · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's based on WineX, which was a Wine fork that had better DirectX support.

  3. As a gaming platform? by taskforce · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Having never used Cedega before, I was wondering what the noticeable drop in framerate would be as opposed to when the games were running natively in Windows XP? Hopefully some of what horsepower the computer is throwing at the game is refunded in that it doesn't have to run XP in the background, but I'd assume the net performance change is in the negative direction.

    Does anyone regularly use Cedega to play 3D FPS and if so are they playable with a non-cutting edge system? (thinking last generation card or whatever.)It would be nice to lose the XP install on my Hard Drive.

    --
    My 3D Texturing Skinning work (under construction)
    1. Re:As a gaming platform? by et764 · · Score: 5, Informative

      I use Cedega to play Half-Life 2 on an Athlon XP 2200+ and a Geforce 4 Ti 4200 128MB. It runs really smoothely. I've never played it on a comparable computer under Windows, so I can't say if there's a framerate drop, but the framerate is still high enough, and that's really what matters.

  4. Re:Cedega will never get my money. by vp0ng · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is exactly the kind of company that the Linux community needs to embrace to bring it more into the mainstream. Cutting them off because you have to pay for it only hurts Linux in the long run. Get in the mainstream. Get noticed. Gamers are a huge PC market, and more often than not, they build their own systems and are not afraid of computers or learning new systems. With the ability to play their games, more and more will flock to Linux. But it needs movements like this one. I will happily give Transgaming my money for a subscription.

    --
    (Futurama) Fry: "My folks were always on me to groom myself and wear underpants. What am I, the pope?"
  5. Interesting business model. by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I signed up for Transgaming earlier this year. Like many others I gave them my money so I could vote for my favourite games. Unfortunately, like in just about any democracy, my vote wasn't worth anything, so my favourite games never made it to the top of the TODO list. That said, I still think Cedega is a good product and if Transgaming focused more on building a developer community than paying developers they'd get a lot more games working.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  6. Re:Cedega will never get my money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    only word that comes to mind is "tool".

    you figure it out.

    the word FREE as in "I want everything and don't want to pay for it" annoys the dog piss out of me... I prefer my FREE as in "I want everything. I want it to work. I want to be able to fix it myself if it in fact it does not work like I need/want it to. oh and if it meets these requirements.. i'm willing to pay."

    my objection to windows... is that is doesn't meet those requirements...

    Cedega is a hell of a program and has taken the Wine(x) to a whole different level when it comes to Game compatibility. it's worth the price of a subscription...

  7. Good theory... by sterno · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Great idea but here's the problem. If you're a game development company and you can only afford to code for and support one platform, which would you choose:

    1) Windows with 90+% of the market
    2) Linux with 5-10% of the market, give or take

    Also, keep in mind that anybody who's a serious gamer has a Windows machine, or dual-boots.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
  8. Re:Cedega will never get my money. by wangmaster · · Score: 4, Informative

    The transgaming folks have contributed alot of their work into the core wine stuff back. They also said they'll open up everything they can assuming they reach their subscription goal, which I believe they haven't reached, although admittedly there's some contraversy around how to account for where they are toward their goal.

    Their DirectX work is largely something they keep to themselves, but honestly, it's their right to. They took a wine version at a specific point where the license allowed them to do it, and they forked it. They didn't abuse the license, the license specifically allowed it. Sure some people later on felt jipped and changed the license, but that doesn't really reflect on the fact that someone should have considered it when the original license was chosen, especially if they didn't want this to happen.

    Plus, they're putting alot of hard work into the DirectX stuff. I can't fault them for wanting to hang on to it for a while. It's a very niche market they're targetting and they could use the revenue.

    The other component that they get alot of criticism for is the copy protection portions of the code, and I believe this is actually the only part not in CVS and there's a reason for that, it's licensed intellectual property that they aren't at liberty to give out the source code for. Since the legality of no-cd cracks is still in a legal gray area, plus the stability of some cracks are questionable, it's nice that they're able to implement this so we can run pristine binaries of the games.

  9. Review at Linux-gamers by pshuke · · Score: 4, Informative

    Linux-gamers have put up a review, if anyone are interested.
    Doesn't seem too shabby.

  10. The Ultimate Accomplishment by eno2001 · · Score: 4, Funny

    The Microsoft dominated computer industry won't go away until Wine is merged into the Linux kernel so that it gets optimal performance and actually out-Windows Windows itself. Just imagine if the entire whole of Cedega was merged into the Linux kernel to be a completely self contained OS that runs all Windows applications including virii, wormii and and server applications. Just imagine what a combo like Linux + Cedega + IIS would wrought on the world!? It would be awesome. Microsoft would drop dead in it's tracks and no one would ever use Windows again. And not only that, you could run IIS at the same time that you have Unreal 2008 running at 20,000 frames per second with total perspective vortex shading. This would go a long way to improving the work conditions of many IT grunts because the production servers would now be useful for more important things than serving out the corporate web site. :)

    --
    -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
  11. 5.0 is a double edged sword. by ahpx · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm a Transgamer subscriber. Having downloaded and installed 5.0, and used it abit. I'd say 5.0 is a double edged sword. The positives on it is that it fixes alot of problems with older versions and fixes support for the Steam patch that recently broke it before. However the negitives to it is that it completely kills the use of Point2Play which I enjoyed using. Now you have to import all your old settings into Cedega's new GUI which at first might not seem like something bad until you relize that all your old custom made launchers and syslinks and now useless. All in all it's not a bad release, they could have just left some features alone. Now I and many other users have to change syslinks, and rework the old launcher programs we had before.

  12. Nice Advert, but... by 3vi1 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I was thinking about re-subscribing to check it out, then stumbled accross this poll. For some reason, 3/4ths (at this time) of the people responding have negative feelings about the update. That's not a very good sign.