This is a non-answer. Steam is not and should not be the sole source of video games on PC. This is a workaround that doesn't even work as well as you imply. > Just use Windows. Install games from developers directly.…
Everything about it is fickle. Motherboards and USB controllers present themselves different from maker to maker, and SKU to SKU. Any change in your hardware -- including plugging in something like a USB device -- sets…
No, it's nothing like that at all. It's only that if you wear a fedora unironically and have a Slashdot account with a four digit user ID.
Not him but I'll echo the same thing. Unless I absolutely have no other choice, I'm not going back to this setup. It's how I "gamed on Linux" for a couple years. Support is basically you and you alone. The dev for…
It provides bare metal access to the entire hardware stack. So for instance you could run Linux via your integrated GPU (the one on many consumer CPUs) while passing through your dedicated GPU to the Windows VM. This is…
This is a non-answer. Steam is not and should not be the sole source of video games on PC. This is a workaround that doesn't even work as well as you imply. > Just use Windows. Install games from developers directly.…
Everything about it is fickle. Motherboards and USB controllers present themselves different from maker to maker, and SKU to SKU. Any change in your hardware -- including plugging in something like a USB device -- sets…
No, it's nothing like that at all. It's only that if you wear a fedora unironically and have a Slashdot account with a four digit user ID.
Not him but I'll echo the same thing. Unless I absolutely have no other choice, I'm not going back to this setup. It's how I "gamed on Linux" for a couple years. Support is basically you and you alone. The dev for…
It provides bare metal access to the entire hardware stack. So for instance you could run Linux via your integrated GPU (the one on many consumer CPUs) while passing through your dedicated GPU to the Windows VM. This is…