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回報翻譯問題
Game devs should care about this.
When you're talking about software, trying to combine 2 mature systems is bound to result in failure.
Sidenote: It's what Microsoft and Apple are supposed to do now with Windows 8/phone and iOS/OS X. There will be tradeoffs for both systems and it will be a bumpy ride for the both of them. Unlike Ubuntu, who waited to jump into the phone market until portable hardware could run a mature system by itself so they won't have to merge anything. Pretty good move if u ask me.
Well what i think should happen is when the steambox is going to be released, valve should use the static hardware for a baseline for running games via wine, so that it is all done automatically for the user, they will need to make the steambox have a high volume of games, with a good end user experiance, otherwise, it will fail imo
So you'd like them to release a Linux based steam box, only to emulate Windows and run Windows games? If so, why won't they just go full windows from the beginning and cut out the Linux part?
However, none of that matters because they have confirmed the SteamBox will release with Linux preinstalled and the option to install Windows.
Also, on another sidenote, emulation kills progression.
Personally feel like Valve should work on helping more developers release their games native, than try and use WIne.
If we want to see Linux succeed as a platform, we need more native games, not Wine
Well, if Valve would commit to Wine, there would be no reason for developers to even consider Linux compatibility, and it won't happen. Wine would become the standard, something very destructive to the Linux project.
And honestly, why should there be backward compatibilty? Neither Xbox One nor the PS4 support that. And that's a good thing for the sake of legacy code. Agreed, in the case of remaking old games for Linux, there is no legacy code, but if they offer backwards compatibility now in the form of Windows simulation, they will probably have to remove it again at some point in the future in order to progress, making it a temporary promise and not really worth it. + We're talking about PCs, they come in all shapes and sizes and you'll always find a way to play old games again, unlike legacy console-games.
And ok, Wine has been debated on not technically being an emulator, but the results are the same: you trick a program into believing it's running Windows. And that does not help Linux grow into a worthy counterpart.
I'd say: Linux all tha way. :D