Installer Steam
connexion
|
langue
简体中文 (chinois simplifié)
繁體中文 (chinois traditionnel)
日本語 (japonais)
한국어 (coréen)
ไทย (thaï)
Български (bulgare)
Čeština (tchèque)
Dansk (danois)
Deutsch (allemand)
English (anglais)
Español - España (espagnol castillan)
Español - Latinoamérica (espagnol d'Amérique latine)
Ελληνικά (grec)
Italiano (italien)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonésien)
Magyar (hongrois)
Nederlands (néerlandais)
Norsk (norvégien)
Polski (polonais)
Português (portugais du Portugal)
Português - Brasil (portugais du Brésil)
Română (roumain)
Русский (russe)
Suomi (finnois)
Svenska (suédois)
Türkçe (turc)
Tiếng Việt (vietnamien)
Українська (ukrainien)
Signaler un problème de traduction
Any good frame rates?
In fact I'm surprised how well Team Fortress 2 runs on my cheap laptop's built-in "NVIDIA Corporation GT218 [NVS 3100M]" with the nouveau drivers.
I have a SLI setup at home but I haven't been able to test it yet.
The only thing I don't have working is the "big picture mode"; if I click on the button I can only make Steam crash.
- Updated the instructions in the first post for rpmfusion and Nvidia / AMD drivers.
http://www.kielek.net/configure-kielek-yum-repository
Which is meant to complement the RPM Fusion repo for Fedora 18. See the following for more info:
http://www.kielek.net/nvidia-310-driver-fedora-18
I really doubt, all distributions are different.
- Updated to 1.0.0.29
What is steam-launcher? The package I make allows me to launch steam with the application icon or by command line... what else is needed?
For openSUSE use this:
https://en.opensuse.org/Steam
to make an rpm, you need a list of dependecies
And how do you think the rpm is made? This does not answer the question what is steam-launcher.
The spec file with its huge amount of dependencies is here: