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A new promotional video from Alienware showing off their Steam Machine has surfaced recently and it's a pretty nice video.

It does still highlight an issue with SteamOS showing non-SteamOS games on the store. Valve are being far too slow to act on this issue. It should show only SteamOS compatible games everywhere by default, Windows games should be the checkbox, not the other way around. I've mentioned this many times before, but it's a real shame it's still an issue.
It's as dumb as showing Xbox games on a PS4, it just shouldn't happen.

I do love the look of the Alienware Steam Machine, but their new editions are a bit on the pricey side.

They still have their original $450 box, but the new edition above that is a whopping $750 which is going to be a pretty hard to convince people to fork out for it. It does have a much better processor, more RAM and a better GPU though.

Still, it's really pleasing to see them advertise it more.

Anyone here own one, are you happy with it? Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Hardware, SteamOS
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Xaero_Vincent Jul 10, 2016
Quoting: dmantione
Quoting: XaeroVincentIMO, it makes more sense to buy an Alpha R2 then put SteamOS or another distribution on it instead of buying the Steam Machine at this point.

Definately not, because the hardware is the same. You can connect the graphics amplifier to the Steam Machine, you just need to support yourself. Because of lack of Windows license to spend money on, the Steam Controller and the game bundle, the Steam Machine is way preferable over installing SteamOS on the Alpha R2.

The hardware is not the same.

Alpha R2 with graphics amplifier port (Port #3):


Steam Machine R2:
throgh Jul 10, 2016
Quoting: Eike
Quoting: meraco750$ for a sub-par gaming PC.

*lol*

There he is.

Is this the level of constructiveness we can expect from your postings here?

Why don't you get rich selling better PCs with the same form-factor for a lower price?

Great, there is just a comment and because it doesn't fit in the image of some people here it has to be "trolling". Wow, have you ever encountered the idea of asking the experience behind? The only thing I can see here in the spot is some proprietary hardware, a complete closed box, should be sold, combined with a close, proprietary platform. Yeah, and you people like to party for having a Linux completely looking like the black-box Windows here. Party on! :D

You like to party for your Steam-platform and your Steam-machines? So go on: Make everything to let your Linux look like an open-source version of Windows.


Last edited by throgh on 10 July 2016 at 10:20 pm UTC
GustyGhost Jul 11, 2016
Quoting: throghGreat, there is just a comment and because it doesn't fit in the image of some people here it has to be "trolling". Wow, have you ever encountered the idea of asking the experience behind? The only thing I can see here in the spot is some proprietary hardware, a complete closed box, should be sold, combined with a close, proprietary platform. Yeah, and you people like to party for having a Linux completely looking like the black-box Windows here. Party on! :D

You like to party for your Steam-platform and your Steam-machines? So go on: Make everything to let your Linux look like an open-source version of Windows.

I do keep forgetting that there are many Linux guys who also own consoles "for the exclusives" but I guess not everyone is here for the freedom. Like why complain about closed software and monopoly abuse then go out and monetarily reward companies who sell closed software to create abusive monopolies?

But like you say, I probably don't understand the experience behind that rational; somebody explain?
Halifax Jul 11, 2016
Quoting: Segata Sanshiro
Quoting: meraco750$ for a sub-par gaming PC.

I can't believe I'm agreeing with Meraco for once.

I bought the $450 Steam Machine when they first came out, and added an extra 4GB RAM to it. Very happy with it from a hardware standpoint. I thought the i3 CPU would be under powered for gaming, but it's a newer 4 logical core CPU (via hyperthreading) that seems to run most games just fine.

Sexy and small form factor, runs quiet and has a well behaved sleep/resume on the Alienware power button.

I mainly just run it in Desktop mode in my PC room, and it runs the vast majority of my 132+ Linux titles just fine - I didn't buy it for fast AAA gaming, I already have a main PC for that.

In SteamOS, the sleep/resume is fast and very stable - all my open GNOME 3 desktop apps don't dork out on me even after many many sleep/resume cycles. I use the sleep/resume extensively, it's my day-to-day Linux desktop. Especially during the work-week when I don't feel like booting up my main gaming PC just to mess around for an hour or two before bed.

In short, I consider it $450 well spent - only caveat is Valve needs to be keeping SteamOS itself more up to date, if not sexy new features AT LEAST on graphics and OS driver updates.


Last edited by Halifax on 11 July 2016 at 2:11 am UTC
tuubi Jul 11, 2016
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Quoting: AnxiousInfusionBut like you say, I probably don't understand the experience behind that rational; somebody explain?
Surely you can think of one reason to prefer Linux other than freedom? I can think of several. I certainly like the philosophy, but I probably wouldn't limit myself to a free operating system if indeed I found the experience somehow limiting.

I do my share of Linux and open-source "evangelism" if you will, but I leave the actual activism to others.
Eike Jul 11, 2016
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Quoting: throgh
Quoting: Eike*lol*

There he is.

Is this the level of constructiveness we can expect from your postings here?

Why don't you get rich selling better PCs with the same form-factor for a lower price?

Great, there is just a comment and because it doesn't fit in the image of some people here it has to be "trolling".

I didn't talk about "trolling".


Quoting: throghWow, have you ever encountered the idea of asking the experience behind? The only thing I can see here in the spot is some proprietary hardware, a complete closed box, should be sold, combined with a close, proprietary platform. Yeah, and you people like to party for having a Linux completely looking like the black-box Windows here. Party on! :D

You like to party for your Steam-platform and your Steam-machines? So go on: Make everything to let your Linux look like an open-source version of Windows.

I didn't talk about such things either. I was talking about the price tag, which is reasonable for the form-factor, and about Meraco, which didn't yet troll here (but wasn't posting anything constructive either), but clearly is a dedicated anti-Linux troll in the Steam forums. He's actively derailing discussions there; look at his posting history.

Feel free to dislike Steam Machines, but this has nothing to do with the destructive nature of Meraco's postings.


Last edited by Eike on 11 July 2016 at 10:00 am UTC
STiAT Jul 11, 2016
I personally prefer the steam setup with steamlink. I'm not going to put a strong box in my living room, having one strong box "delivering" the games to my other pcs is pretty much enough.

I've now one box ("game server") which delivers the content either via steamlink to my living room or streaming to my notebook with screen in the work room.

Steamlink still has issues (the black flickering in the steam client can be annoying - all the settings/options to set I found were just temporary fixes, the flickering came back, I never had this while gaming though).

Don't know wht the reason is, but at 1920x1080 suddenly the stream increases the traffic heavily (as if compression was submitting black screen/actual screen/black screen/actual screen all over again). This may be related to composite and/or kwin as well, I just didn't figure out why this sometimes happens.
IDNO Jul 11, 2016
I Just wish Valve adds steam Workshop for steamOS. Cuz i want my xorg.conf settings and some xinput settings work within SteamOS bigpicture mode without needing the desktop. If they do this i could just easy upload flash player from the site into the bigpicture mode. :P with just some few minutes. It fixes every sites such as twitch :D.


Last edited by IDNO on 11 July 2016 at 10:31 am UTC
boltronics Jul 12, 2016
Quoting: Vash63
Quoting: mr-eggthey got dying light the following running that smooth ? What's inside it a quad sli titan x setup ?

Dying Light runs pretty well for me on an Nvidia GTX 760 in my SteamOS HTPC. Had to turn some settings down but that video probably isn't maxed out either.

Needless to say it also runs great on my Arch Linux desktop with a GTX 980 ti.

I've got a Fury X. It runs like crap at 1920x1080, and not much difference from the still reasonably powerful R9 285 which I upgraded from.

DL is horribly unoptimized. I suspect I'll be better of waiting on Wine to be able to run the Windows build.
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