Steam installeren
inloggen
|
taal
简体中文 (Chinees, vereenvoudigd)
繁體中文 (Chinees, traditioneel)
日本語 (Japans)
한국어 (Koreaans)
ไทย (Thai)
Български (Bulgaars)
Čeština (Tsjechisch)
Dansk (Deens)
Deutsch (Duits)
English (Engels)
Español-España (Spaans - Spanje)
Español - Latinoamérica (Spaans - Latijns-Amerika)
Ελληνικά (Grieks)
Français (Frans)
Italiano (Italiaans)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesisch)
Magyar (Hongaars)
Norsk (Noors)
Polski (Pools)
Português (Portugees - Portugal)
Português - Brasil (Braziliaans-Portugees)
Română (Roemeens)
Русский (Russisch)
Suomi (Fins)
Svenska (Zweeds)
Türkçe (Turks)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamees)
Українська (Oekraïens)
Een vertaalprobleem melden
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: