linuxgamingcentral.com

mindlight, to linux in The end of Linux Gaming Central

As someone who’s been writing for close to ten years now, I would tend to think I would get paid at this point. Or, at least write for a site that would. I can’t begin to describe in words how frustrating and unfair it’s been to see websites that are “younger” than me become so successful that they’re able to write for their site as a full-time job in just one year.

This is a truth I’ve seen again and again throughout my career (started my career in IT in the 90’s). Just because you’re awesome at something doesn’t guarantee you a fat bank account. The people who most often succeed are the ones that have at least some knowledge of a subject and some understanding of how business work.

It doesn’t mean anything that you’re the best at what you do if you don’t know how to get the customer to sign the agreement.

neytjs, to linux in The end of Linux Gaming Central

That’s too bad. I remember reading it some back in 2022 and 2023. Best wishes to the author.

yetAnotherUser, to linux in The end of Linux Gaming Central

It’s the first time I’ve ever heard about this website, but it seems like the author’s decision was the best decision they could’ve done, due to how pressured they felt with the conrent creation thing.

SuperSpruce,

My one question is why the site is shutting down rather than merely not making new posts anymore.

halendos,

Website hosting costs most likely.

yetAnotherUser,

I’m thinking that the author is doing this so they avoid thoughts like “the website is still up, why am I not posting anything on it?” We are talking about a person who felt the urge to post at least once every single day of their life, while maintaining a job.

carzian,

Don’t underestimate the relief of a clean ending. The author isn’t in a good place, it won’t do him any favors to leave it up. He clearly wants to put this chapter of his life behind him.

just_another_person, to linux in The end of Linux Gaming Central

Man. Sorry it’s been so rough. I hope this helps you out.

Fubarberry, to linux in The end of Linux Gaming Central
@Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz avatar

Yeah, I can definitely get that being expected to create content regularly wears you out. I wouldn’t personally enjoy the life of a content creator, some days I just want to be quiet and have minimal interaction.

TGhost, to linux in The end of Linux Gaming Central
@TGhost@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Farewell. Health before the rest

Varyk, to linux in The end of Linux Gaming Central

I hope they are okay and shutting the site down helps.

sofinzki, to gaming in You’ll Soon Be Able to Install Nix Packages on Your Steam Deck

This is probably not something I will make use of at all in the near future but I still absolutely love that they are doing this! Valve is really carving out a path forward for linux as a whole and eventually normal folks - not just enthusiasts - will be able to drop Windows completely.

Biberkopf, to gaming in You’ll Soon Be Able to Install Nix Packages on Your Steam Deck
@Biberkopf@feddit.de avatar

What is the current state on SteamOS as a desktop replacement? My understanding is that the currently downloadable version is only the SteamDeck version and not suitable as a Windows replacement for the desktop.

marvus,

I don't know what you mean by "steamdeck version", but afaik the SteamOS you can download from steam is version 2 which is really old by now while the Steamdeck runs version 3 and is still not available for download outside of it. Mind you it isn't just a major version change but they even changed the linux OS it's based on, moving from Debian to Arch.
As for the replacement for desktop, the Steamdeck (and with it SteamOS 3) launched with full desktop mode available and while the core system is immutable as discussed, it's still a fully functional desktop OS and as such it depends on your personal needs how much of a windows replacement it can be, just like any other linux OS. Also you might need a dock or other USB hub to attach a keyboard and mouse if you need them, but there is onscreen keyboard and touchpad on the steamdeck available.

IronDonkey,

I don’t use it as a desktop replacement (I still have a windows desktop). But I do but default have my deck docked and hooked up to a TV, in desktop mode.

I’ve installed various flatpack programs, to include discord, chrome, and a couple jetbrains ides for various languages. They work great. I’ve done a couple non steam games (diablo), with mild annoyance but success in the end.

I have not used any office programs on it (as much as it’s cool to like Linux, I just think Microsoft wins by a lot there, and have no desire to get them working on Linux).

The deck itself has some power limitations, but I have no reason to think that they would translate to steam os on a more powerful machine.

So basically, it probably depends on what you want. It’s pretty reasonable. Definitely good enough for my secondary computer that blocks ads for videos on my tv. But personally, I still want a windows computer, because windows is the default assumption for most software I use.

russjr08, to gaming in You’ll Soon Be Able to Install Nix Packages on Your Steam Deck
@russjr08@outpost.zeuslink.net avatar

Whoa! Definitely not something I expected, but will happily take it!

Kaldo, to gaming in You’ll Soon Be Able to Install Nix Packages on Your Steam Deck

What does 'making changes to its core system' mean? I though people were able to use steam deck as a proper pc already, installing new apps on it and stuff like that?

thingsiplay,

SteamOS core system is locked as read-only. That is what immutable means. In example you cannot install applications using the core system management named "pacman" (short for package manager). There is a toggle in SteamOS to disable this read-only functionality, but with next system update all changes are reverted.

But how do you install applications on SteamOS? You certainly can do, right? Yes! That's the store it offers, which uses a different concept called Flatpak. These are programs you can install without touching the core system. And therefore these are persistent, even on system updates. And they are similar to Android programs in a sandbox.

I assume you are not familiar with how Linux systems operate. Imagine this like Android, where you are only allowed to install from a store, which cannot make changes to the Android core, but only install applications on a secured way. But that is limited. Or imagine a game console where you can only install games and programs which the store has. And it lacks Command Line Interface programs in example or many other tools not found in the official store. That's how SteamOS works at the moment.

And here comes the Nix packagement into play. This is a different system again. You can think of it like Flatpak, meaning any changes to it would be sandboxed and do not touch the core system. This allows for Command Line tools and some other stuff, as discussed before. Nix packages will be part of the next big update of SteamOS.

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