What are you talking about? You diminish.
The origin policy you were worrying about? ring a bell?
Not 10 examples.Not "ever-escalating" either.You must be... trolling?
Trend is clear.
No it's not, lol
http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=valve_linux_dampfnudeln&num=1Seems Valve are porting source engine and steam to linux. Someone will make a steambox fi they do.
They’ve got the big screen,now give them the big picture.It’s time to come out of the den and explore a few more rooms of the house.Heading to the living room—or anywhere there’s a big screen—is Steam’s soon-to-be-released big-picture mode, offering simple, easy-to-read navigation designed specifically for TV. With full controller support, big-picture mode will let gamers kick back and enjoy their favorite games on the biggest screen in the house.Steam’s big-picture mode doesn’t require any additional development from you. Just ensure your game works well with a controller, and we’ll take care of the rest. And don’t worry, keyboard and mouse aren’t going anywhere—users will be able to switch between input devices at any time.This revolution will be televised
It's in Beta at the moment. I'll give it ago on my TV and controller and report backhttp://store.steampowered.com/bigpicture/#out_now
i had kinda hope speakman had died, what a pity
Interesting times...http://www.theverge.com/2012/11/16/3652756/valve-big-picture-mode-steam-os-linux-game-console
Earlier this month, Valve opened up a beta of Steam for Linux to 1,000 lucky users. Valve didn’t do it quite alone: the company enlisted the support of Nvidia to write Linux drivers, and is working with Intel and AMD as well. According to the company, Valve’s own games are running faster on Linux than on Windows right now. Still, getting gamers — and game developers — to switch to Ubuntu might be hard.But what if Ubuntu Linux wasn’t the target here?What if instead, Valve was building its own Linux-based operating system? You could call it Steam OS. Rock Paper Shotgun's John Walker proposed the idea a few months back, and it makes sense. Valve could take the same approach that Google took with Android by licensing the operating system to hardware manufacturers, and create a new platform in the process. Perhaps the Amazon Kindle Fire makes for a better analogy: where Amazon crafted a lightweight, purpose-built system that revolves around shopping, Steam OS could revolve around games.