2013-01-05, 18:41 | Link #1 | |
Juanita/Kiteless
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: New England
Age: 40
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PC Gaming Console for TVs - "Steam-Box" - Linux Based - 2013 Release
German site Golem.de attended a conference on the 29th of December where Ben Krasnow, Valve electronics engineer, talked ( among other stuff) about the company's plans for a Linux-based console. Here are the main takeaways from the article:
- Valve's console will launch in 2013 - It will use Linux, not Windows - Valve's hardware labs will reveal other stuff in 2013 (possibly controllers? VR?) - Krasnow has been working on Valve hardware with Jeri Ellsworth since 2011 - Possible reveal at GDC, Phoronix thinks that E3 is more likely Quote:
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2013-01-06, 12:54 | Link #4 |
(ノಠ益ಠ)ノ彡┻━┻
Moderator
Join Date: Mar 2006
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Waste of money, honestly. PC's hook up to televisions anyway, and you're not going to get any PC box cost down to console costs and still be able to offer the performance equivalent. The closed box nature of consoles allows them to get away with PC performance at lower specs and prices. Also, while W8 does indeed suck, but it's not awful, 7 is still fine. Many people skipped Vista too, and life went on. I doubt 8 will stick around long.
If Steam wants to make PC gaming more user friendly, they'd do well to note the new Nvidia tool.
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2013-01-06, 14:01 | Link #6 | |
blinded by blood
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2013-01-06, 14:11 | Link #7 |
Goat Herder
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Age: 36
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I dunno... I'd find something like this kinda useful, as far as saving space on my computer goes for gaming. Steam games take up a LOT of room on my computer, so if I could move it all over onto a dedicated platform... I'd see how that'd be a bit tempting.
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2013-01-06, 16:10 | Link #8 |
Obey the Darkly Cute ...
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Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: On the whole, I'd rather be in Kyoto ...
Age: 66
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My one remaining complaints about consoles are the lack of upgrade (video, RAM, Hard drive), all of which are easily solved ... and a keyboard+mouse, also easily solved. I have a feeling the mod problem isn't hard to fix either (steam workshop, etc).
Do that for me and I can completely disconnect my computer as a tool from my computer as a gaming device.
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2013-01-06, 20:10 | Link #9 |
Kurumada's lost child
Join Date: Nov 2003
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Would people please stop spreading misinformation about PC being too expensive for gaming? For $600 or less I could build a small tower that can play all games at 1080p with medium to high settings and still look way better than any console would. On top of that I could watch movies at 60 FPS, surf the web and connect to a TV or make it my home theater center. As for games goes, with steam and GOG alone I pay way less for games than console games. Sometimes I don't have to pay a penny and I am not talking about piracy.
Console gaming is more expensive by a long shot; there are no options for modding or upgrading components and have less freedoms than PCs do. Also most new games cost 60 dollars each. A PC gamer saves more money than a console gamer and have more powerful hardware at his disposal. As far as games being harder to run on the PC than in consoles this is also not true. Most games, with a very few exceptions, have an auto-detect function that allows the user to just click and play without a hitch. I believe Valve is trying disprove the long held beliefs that PC gaming is more expensive and cumbersome. I wish them luck in their endeavor. God knows I hate how console gaming have degenerated the state of the gaming industry both technically and creatively. Except Nintendo of course! Those guys can do no harm in my eyes, they are the most respectable and innovative gaming company in my eyes.
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2013-01-06, 23:43 | Link #10 |
Many RPGs, Little Time
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PC gaming is not for everyone, so I think that Steam is trying to change that fact.
A Console-PC would make setups much more affordable and easier on tournaments too. However, consoles exclusives will always stay there. I can't really imagine Disgaea, Final Fantasy, Blazblue and many others on PC. Console industry will do everthing to destroy this project.
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2013-01-07, 05:38 | Link #11 | |
blinded by blood
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Just a crappy monitor alone is $150-200. A good monitor is even more. A half-decent mid-range video card will run you $200. A Core i3 CPU will cost over $100. Windows 7 is another $100. You're still without RAM, hard drive, case, PSU, mainboard, input devices, speakers or headphones... Granted you can build a halfway decent gaming rig for $600 if you build just the box and don't buy or already have a monitor, keyboard, mouse, speakers/headphones and such, but you'll have limited storage space and your GPU will be mid-range at best. It will not play "all games at 1080p with everything on high." It'll struggle on games like Metro 2033, Far Cry 3, Black Ops 2--basically any non-RPG that doesn't use old UE3. My PC cost me $1600 for everything in January of last year. It did not play all games at 1920x1200 with all the settings maxed out. Granted, I did spend money on things for non-gaming related tasks, such as an SSD (not needed for gaming), an IPS monitor and a mechanical switch keyboard--but if gaming was my primary purpose for building my PC, it would have cost much, much more, even without the productivity extras. I can't even run Skyrim with everything maxed out. I have to disable antialiasing (and limit anisotropic filtering) on almost every new title or I get massive slowdown. A current generation, high-end single-GPU video card is $400-500 easily, and only the high-end cards can run everything out now at 1080p with all the bells and whistles. A decent Core i5, Sandy Bridge or Ivy Bridge, is going to run you $180-200 just for the CPU. You cannot build a gaming rig that can beat a console for $600. You just can't. It's not possible. You can barely build a basic productivity workstation for that price with a monitor, keyboard, mouse, etc, especially when you're shelling out $100 alone just for the operating system.
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2013-01-07, 05:55 | Link #12 |
Unspecified
Scanlator
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Unspecified
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probably the closest thing you can get for "console-PC"
http://www.dell.com/us/p/alienware-x51/pd even then it still more expensive than console and missing component like keyboard and mouse (I ignore monitor since is like saying you need TV to play PS3) anyway about steambox. probably just like PC in the link. it over simplicity of plug in and play. thought i am bit worried that it use linux since majority of steam will not work
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2013-01-07, 08:35 | Link #15 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
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2013-01-07, 08:54 | Link #16 |
Itadaki-nyaaa !!
Join Date: Apr 2008
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Valve didn't just start to develop the steambox after they learned about what Win8 could mean for pc gaming, right? Because given this ridiculously close release date it seems like a dangerous and costly kneejerk reaction. I'm no expert on console development though...
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2013-01-07, 09:58 | Link #17 |
Nyaaan~~
Join Date: Feb 2006
Age: 40
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Sorry, hasn't this already been done?
The Ouya is already out -- Android powered minibox console for the TV -- Kickstarter campaign is already over and they have finally started producing. http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/...o-game-console
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2013-01-07, 12:06 | Link #18 |
Juanita/Kiteless
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: New England
Age: 40
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The Ouya and SteamBox are not the same. They both stand apart from each other, and stand apart from the XBox 360 and PS3. The only consoles that are really like each other are the PS3 and XBox 360. The Wii U is quite a bit like XBox 360 and PS3, but stands out a bit from them, and also, the fact that it is the only console where you can get new Nintendo games makes it stand out.
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2013-01-07, 12:22 | Link #19 | |
Many RPGs, Little Time
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Used parts: i5 2500K - 120$ 5870 - 120$ Z77 - 80$ 4GB - 40$ New parts: 650W PSU - 100$ 1TB HD - 80$ Case - 80$ And that's only if we're talking about a brand-new PC. A upgrade should be much more cheaper, and it's extremely likely that the 80$ Case, mouses and keyboards wouldn't be even needed. That card is able to run everthing on medium at decent frames (above 50fps, console run at 25/30fps).
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2013-01-07, 19:25 | Link #20 |
blinded by blood
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lol you think a 5870 can run everything at 1080p with maxed AA, AS, and all other bells and whistles? I want some of what you're smoking.
Ya'll have really low standards. Anyway I was arguing Sugetsu's point that a $600 PC can run all games that exist at 1080p with maximum graphics settings, which is totally false--there are lots of games (Metro 2033, Black Ops 2, Crysis, FC3, FEAR 2, for examples) that'll just choke and die if you attempted such a thing. Yeah, you can build a $600 PC that'd be equivalent or slightly better than a console, but why, when a console is equivalent for less than half the price? And you don't have to worry about building it, or dealing with driver conflicts or OS issues. You don't have viruses to worry about. It's an easy, simple, brain-dead appliance that all you have to do is turn it on and play. Maybe if every gamer knew enough about computers, PC gaming would be stronger than it is now, but most don't and don't care. Hell, even half the PC gamers I know don't have a clue how to build a PC from parts--three of them hired me to build their machines, and the other two know just enough to be dangerous.
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