Valve Blog Announces Dates For Steam Linux External Beta
An anonymous reader writes "In the third post to the new Valve Linux Blog, the Linux team has announced that starting next week they will begin their internal beta, with an external beta of 1000 users to begin mid 'some time in October.' There will be an external beta sign up page made available 'soon' according to the blog."
if Steam works on Linux with enough games I may just skip Windows 8 and everything after that.
Slashdot is miraculously blessed by IT departments. In one of the offices I work at, their connection is so limited it's untrue - even stuff like the Community Recycling Network (crn.org.uk) is blocked, and the block page says "Category: None" so it may even be a whitelist.
Yet all the slashdot subdomains and the main one are completely unfiltered - along with, suspiciously enough, things like The Register and xkcd. So it's geeks policing geeks I guess. I get a free pass!
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I'm a real tech.
They schedule company parties during my work shift and I don't get to go.
Of course the apartment party I was sort of the hero, they didn't expect a fat guy to beat that many skinny people in limbo.
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Another way you won't have to use Steam to benefit from this: The Steam development effort has already brought a lot of driver patches along, improving mostly 3D performance.
The simplest way to explain Steam is that it is DRM done right.
Speaking as somebody who recently lived in a hotel with shitty wifi for 6 months, I have to chuckle at that statement. It stopped being "DRM done right" when it decided it wouldn't let me play my single-player game while the wifi was down.
Don't get me wrong, I do agree with most of your post, especially the point about it being a deterrent to piracy, but really it's not 'right' it's just courteously applied lube.
"I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)
Every game purchased through Steam requires online activation, every single one
You mean the online store, that you're using, while online, to purchase games, online, requires you to be online to install your game, that you download while online? Say it ain't so.
The Steam DRM is optional, btw, entirely up to the publisher, which is why a lot of older games don't have it and can be run without Steam once they're installed.
I hate having to store the media, and especially to go through a set of discs when setting up a new machine. On Steam you just click the games you want to install and away it goes. It's far superior to the crap we had to go through in the "olden days" IMO. If you have a slow net connection you can also backup and import from your old computer. That's still a little annoying, but it does mean only one transfer rather than again going through all your disks.
When the developers add extra layers of DRM on top of Steam it pisses me off too. I don't see the point in it..
which is totally what she said
Bullcrap.
Just now I wanted to play some Darksiders II, so I launch Steam.
After sitting at 'Connecting to Steam account' for a while, I get another window that says 'Could not connect to Steam network. This could be due to a problem with your internet connection, or with the Steam network.'
It does not go into offline mode.
It won't let me play my game.
THANKS, STEAM.