CCP To Discontinue EVE Online Support For Linux
maotx writes "CCP's recent support for EVE Online in Linux is now set to be discontinued this March. Released last November along with the Mac OS X client, it has failed to share the expected continual growth as seen with Mac client. Feedback on the EVE Online forums, which includes the e-mail in which CCP announced this decision, suggest that the client was not preferred for Linux users as it did not support the Premium graphics client and did not run as well as the win32 client under Wine. For those who wish to stop playing EVE Online, CCP is offering a refund towards unused game time. Select quote from the e-mail: 'The feedback and commitment we obtained from players like you helped both CCP and Transgaming with our attempts to improve on the quality and stability of the client. Many of us in CCP use Linux and are convinced of its merits as an operating system.'"
makes you wonder how they failed to realease an official client that performs better than under WINE.
The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than the question of whether a submarine can swim.
To your title: Yes.
Its easily a support nightmare.
OTOH, i am very sure that CCP looked at their stats, counted the number of linux cusomers and made some quick calculations that showed they will never make the money they would need to spend.
HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
Yes, but by standardizing API's and kernel goo it would make it easy for so-called proprietary vendors like CCP to support Linux. According to som in the Linux community it is fact better to provide random API's that change all the time--that way proprietary vendors get scared off.
The fact that Linux is so hard for vendors like CCP is seen by some in the Linux community as a feature, not a bug. Hopefully, those very same people in the community are cheering CCP pulling out of native Linux support, as it clearly shows their plan is working as intended.
That is all nice, but the byproduct of that process is that it is a bitch to write drivers for the kernel. Since the kernel development process is seen as a role model for how to develop open source projects, others follow suit. Result? There is no consistent application stack to build against--thus supporting the amorphous pool of code that comprises your average linux distro is a very, very expensive process.
The only way out is to open source your code. Some companies are cool with that, but many are not. Clearly the WoW guys are not. If you want the WoW guys back, you'd make it easy to sell profitable applications that run on linux. However, that would require a shift in the culture and values of the entire linux ecosystem and I'm fairly positive that such a shift would never, ever, happen.