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报告翻译问题
https://www.rockpapershotgun.com/the-community-continues-to-blow-our-minds-valve-talk-the-steam-deck-one-year-on#:~:text=Either%20way%2C%20it%E2%80%99s,a%20few%20years.%22
The deck will be around for quite some time yet.
Unlike the flash in the pan devices that come and go.
The Deck actually has something going for it.
You know the new iPhone 15 has 4x the ray tracing a PS5 has?
But yet again, having the power is nothing, if you do not know how to use it.
A better version is in very early development.
Like I'm sure they're developing a 'version 2' rgiht now. You have to be if you want that to be done within a reasonable timeframe. but given the global shipping and manufactruing issues in general I'd wager they'd like to ride out the benefits of scale for as long as they can.
Note that generally speaking especially with highly integrated devices like a SteamDeck, its very very difficult to do replacements of core components without basically redoing the entire design. Like you can swap out capacitor manufacturer and RAM manfucatures, and even display manufacturers relatively easily since you can find the same thing from a different source (as shown with the 2 different fan models). These are commodiies and are basically interchangable as long as you can find a similar place that can give you the same specifications.
But you're not going to be able to replace any major things like the CPU without basically a major redesign
Kind of a Switch,Steamdeck and Ally all in one, perfect.
A Steam Deck 2 will likely utilize a next generation chip that provides more performance at lower TDP. This remains very important in a portable with battery tech as it is now. Valve worked directly with AMD to come up with a custom chip tailor made to meet the needs of what they were trying to do with the Steam Deck. I expect they'll do the same again.
Meanwhile, I still think the Steam Deck offers the perfect balance of price, performance, and battery life with what's available today. You can't really improve one of those three categories without hurting the other two.
The Legion Go is an interesting device. Ultimately I fear it still suffers from a case of "bigger number better". It has a 2k display at 144 hz, even though it's hardware can't hope to actually run new games at that resolution and framerate. And with all these competing devices, the companies selling them to you have zero stake in continued support of the hardware. Once you buy it, they don't really care anymore. They have no incentive to provide further support. On the other hand Valve has very good reason to ensure the Steam Deck remains well supported and functional for years to come. A working Steam Deck in the hands of a happy customer equates directly to more sales on Steam. It's kind of the console business model, but without a terrible walled garden of a console ecosystem.