Adobe just made it so their shitty software would quit working if you stopped paying them.
Apple made it so you no longer own the hardware that you buy from them (without jailbreak exploits, which are totes illegal, but also Apple doesn't have any of those because their software is and always has been invulnerable to security breaches).
think sony did it first, though not in this particular way... think they slipped a clause into the EULA for the PS3 (4?) that they retain rights to the physical hardware or some such.
Not really sure if it would hold up in court, but yeah...
No kidding. I'm about to dip my toes into games on Linux just because I'm sick of how much more and more Windows has essentially become a live-service game.
I wish Valve made a desktop version of their SteamOS, I find it to be way more intuitive than Windows; I also love the way you can update software/drivers just by typing it into the search bar and automatically being able to download the app/driver from the search bar. It blew my mind that Linux had that kind of functionality.
Plus, with majority of worthwhile games running on SteamOS, I have no need for Windows on a pure gaming rig. The problem is that SteamOS doesn't play nice with Nvidia drivers -- so until they get that sorted, it makes Linux a bit more cumbersome to use for certain games.
I wish Valve made a desktop version of their SteamOS
I seriously annoyed that they haven't already done this. Microsoft really needs a real competitor, because Apple is just overpriced trash for hipsters and faggots.
if you're gonna get into linux, start with Fedora or Ubuntu, they're basically the dominant distros, so the community support is going to be bigger.
Ubuntu is a bit bigger and more user-friendly, Fedora is more bleeding-edge (which makes sense since it's effectively where RedHat beta-tests all the features they want to add to RHEL )
I'm pretty good with Linux, just not gaming on Linux. I went from Ubuntu to Fedora a year or so ago as my main desktop OS. I just don't game on that machine. I may see about setting up a dual boot to at least try some games. I've used Factorio successfully, but that was just too easy it doesn't ask much of the computer.
You can thank Apple for that practice by the way. They were the first to come up with the idea that you're just renting your property from them.
I thought it was those pricks at Adobe with their subscription software.
Adobe just made it so their shitty software would quit working if you stopped paying them.
Apple made it so you no longer own the hardware that you buy from them (without jailbreak exploits, which are totes illegal, but also Apple doesn't have any of those because their software is and always has been invulnerable to security breaches).
think sony did it first, though not in this particular way... think they slipped a clause into the EULA for the PS3 (4?) that they retain rights to the physical hardware or some such.
Not really sure if it would hold up in court, but yeah...
Would you like to update Windows?
-yes
-yes but later
-no but actually yes
No kidding. I'm about to dip my toes into games on Linux just because I'm sick of how much more and more Windows has essentially become a live-service game.
I wish Valve made a desktop version of their SteamOS, I find it to be way more intuitive than Windows; I also love the way you can update software/drivers just by typing it into the search bar and automatically being able to download the app/driver from the search bar. It blew my mind that Linux had that kind of functionality.
Plus, with majority of worthwhile games running on SteamOS, I have no need for Windows on a pure gaming rig. The problem is that SteamOS doesn't play nice with Nvidia drivers -- so until they get that sorted, it makes Linux a bit more cumbersome to use for certain games.
I seriously annoyed that they haven't already done this. Microsoft really needs a real competitor, because Apple is just overpriced trash for hipsters and faggots.
ChimeraOS is pretty good if you have a dedicated gaming PC... it's basically steamOS plus some emulators
if you're gonna get into linux, start with Fedora or Ubuntu, they're basically the dominant distros, so the community support is going to be bigger.
Ubuntu is a bit bigger and more user-friendly, Fedora is more bleeding-edge (which makes sense since it's effectively where RedHat beta-tests all the features they want to add to RHEL )
I'm pretty good with Linux, just not gaming on Linux. I went from Ubuntu to Fedora a year or so ago as my main desktop OS. I just don't game on that machine. I may see about setting up a dual boot to at least try some games. I've used Factorio successfully, but that was just too easy it doesn't ask much of the computer.