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번역 관련 문제 보고
The Ally isn't a gaming laptop and isn't known for the things you listed. Most performance test put it marginally better than the Deck unless you want to drain it's battery within an hour.
You can also just download a version of Linux and install Steam, having it boot with the system.
SteamOS that is included on the Steam Deck uses ArchLinux.
So if you can install an OS on the computer, it isn't really difficult to get SteamOS or something similar running on it.
Not sure if the Asus Rog Ally allows for a change in OS on it, so may want to contact Nvidia on the matter first.
Depending on the security on the Ally it might already support it, just like the Steam deck supports windows even though microsoft didn't make it support windows, Steam aka the developer allowed it to be installed
Valve has to release holo(SteamOS3) to the public.
there is nothing to "support".
but ... dunno why you would do that ... the ally is a perfectly fine windows-preinstalled device.
https://youtu.be/6r8t90fW7Kg
But as SteamOS 3.0 isn't available for Desktops yet, it may lack a lot of driver support for hardware not present in non-SteamDeck devices.
Dumbest thing I've heard in quite a while
Ironic.
There are games that it does run smoother on.
No need to reinvent the wheel there, unless ASUS did something really bone-headed and tried to stuff their own power manager into a separate chip, and disable the AMD power management on a hardware level. Which, they didn't, that would be stupid even for ASUS.
Most of this stuff is just linux kernel work or kernel modules, so it's not really like Valve has to explicitly work with ASUS or reverse engineer anything. It'll just kinda be there when AMD gets it there.
To the bickering about SteamOS vs Windows, though, I switched recently from Windows to SteamOS on a GPD Win2, which is sort of a worst case for handheld linux gaming. 2 cores and 4 threads is not a lot of CPU for background shader compilation, and the hardware can barely even run the BPM UI half the time.
In game, though, things tend to run pretty close to Windows. Some games see maybe 10~20% lower performance, others run par, some even run better, and there are more, better, and more stable options for controlling resolution, using integer scaling, and other useful stuff to make the overall experience nicer on SteamOS than Windows.
On something with a modern CPU and GPU architecture and more performance, SteamOS probably comes well ahead as a gaming platform compared to Windows, with the exception of some poor compatibility with a small selection of games.
For example, gyro is not yet supported, but it could, if the Ally would be added as a new controller definition, besides the Xbox, PS4/5, JoyCon definitions. It would make gyro and the front/back buttons support possible. After that, it's as easy as setting Steam to boot into Gamepad UI in Windows, and removing Armory Crate.