Never thought that being a reader of GamingOnLinux and Debian mailing lists would intersect so directly. But look at what just arrived at my mailbox. That is right, Valve is giving away all their past and future games to Debian Developers.
Read the original post at debian-devel-announce. Disclaimer: I am not a Debian Developer.
QuoteHi all,
At $dayjob for Collabora, we've been working with Valve on SteamOS, which is based on Debian. Valve are keen to contribute back to the community, and I'm discussing a couple of ways that they may be able to do that [0].
Immediately though, they've offered a free subscription to any Debian Developer which provides access to all past and future Valve produced games [1]!
If you're interested, and a DD, simply mail [email protected] with a mail signed by a key in the Debian keyring, and he'll send you back a redemption code to add in Steam. If you haven't heared from him in a couple of days, you can also prod me at [email protected] as he may happen to be on holiday that week.
Happy gaming,
Neil
[0] If anyone has any specific ideas, drop me a mail :)
[1] List at http://deb.li/91yz, but excluding Steam Greenlight.
Read the original post at debian-devel-announce. Disclaimer: I am not a Debian Developer.
Some you may have missed, popular articles from the last month:
Mm. Its rather odd but what can valve actually give except dosh....which is actually probably a better idea.
Debian Devs: No, they aren't free.
How much do you like discussing the same thing over and over? Steam is DRM in itself, it requires me to be a Steam user to buy and play the games, that's even worse than having to input keycodes or the game disk to play. DRM is about control, Steam too. I don't want to be a Steam user nor install some crappy client, I just want to buy and play games and I do in the DRM-free online stores. Why do Steam users need to claim it's DRM-free when it isn't?
Not very much. Which is why I have been just idly flicking through these discussions lately - when someone offers up a new point I might choose to respond, but for the moment it is the usual same back and forth.
And derogatory comments like this is where Phoronix culture springs from. Only try and start a fire if you actually want the place to burn.
Using certain software to manage downloads and installation !=DRM. Using Steam to download a game doesn't mean it is DRMed even if it can only be downloaded that way. If a developer decided to only upload their DRM free game as a torrent you would HAVE to use a torrent client to download a game, that wouldn't make the game any less DRM free. In the case of DRM free games on Steam, Steam is simply a download manager. A game is DRM free independent of its delivery method. A developer could decide to sell usernames and passwords to a FTP server as its only delivery method and it would still be DRM free. With the games that are DRM free on Steam you can take the files Steam provides you and back them up and/or create installers and/or packages from those files that you could then proceed to install on any computer you want to. You could do this with any DRM free game on Steam including for example HL2(Yes it is DRM free I checked my self).
If you want games on Linux you will have DRM on Linux since it's entrenched in the industry... "I for one am grateful." - Rabbit-Tooth Jane
@Hamish http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/derogatory
DRM wasn't what the news was about, you're all off on a tangent and my statement is derogatory? You have to be British... (there's your derogatory)
It's not as bad as with video. DRM free games are increasing in number, so if you want games on Linux, you don't need DRMed games. It's not "entrenched in the industry". Its entrenched in distributors who are conductive for its usage. But this was indeed already discussed at length.
That said, I like steam. I'll stick with them until I feel they're evil. Granted, this was my mindset with Google; of whom I've only grown more suspicious and resentful.