Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller"
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@tim_g said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
@wirestyle22 What about real massive multiplayer games like WoW or PUG types?
Wow was 100% normal. I don't own pubg. I was surprised r6 siege played so well. fps are usually the biggest problems with something like this
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For me it's not the FPS, so long as it's over 30, which is not hard by any means.
My problem is latency. I could easily play over TeamViewer for example... but connection speed and latency are major issues.
How is this different?
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@tim_g said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
For me it's not the FPS, so long as it's over 30, which is not hard by any means.
My problem is latency. I could easily play over TeamViewer for example... but connection speed and latency are major issues.
How is this different?
I don't feel any latency at all. That's the difference
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@wirestyle22 said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
@bigbear said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
@wirestyle22 are you using, can you vouch?
Would be nervous to login with my kids steam credentials to try, trying to work out in me head how this would be setup.
I have used it and am in direct contact with one of the devs if you guys have questions. Any of the normal games I play felt fantastic (r6 siege, street fighter 5, battlerite, divinity original sin 2). They use an algorithm for keyboard and mouse latency that is apparently fantastic. With that said there are issues with some games I've heard of but have not experienced. Doom was one of them, which I haven't played.
You can create a new steam account as they have locally installed demos you can play if you're nervous. One of my good friends works for the company, although he's not the dev I know.
I agree with @scottalanmiller. Low cost Linux desktops are where it will really shine
As @scottalanmiller said being able to access from Linux or a cheap computer with No GPU would make sense.
I don’t think support anything other than what RDP supports, however I’m curious as to how they developed the client. Is there an SDK for RDP 10?
Also, it says $20/month is that unlimited hours? That doesn’t seem expensive at all to me, but maybe I’m reading it wrong....
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@bigbear said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
@wirestyle22 said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
@bigbear said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
@wirestyle22 are you using, can you vouch?
Would be nervous to login with my kids steam credentials to try, trying to work out in me head how this would be setup.
I have used it and am in direct contact with one of the devs if you guys have questions. Any of the normal games I play felt fantastic (r6 siege, street fighter 5, battlerite, divinity original sin 2). They use an algorithm for keyboard and mouse latency that is apparently fantastic. With that said there are issues with some games I've heard of but have not experienced. Doom was one of them, which I haven't played.
You can create a new steam account as they have locally installed demos you can play if you're nervous. One of my good friends works for the company, although he's not the dev I know.
I agree with @scottalanmiller. Low cost Linux desktops are where it will really shine
As @scottalanmiller said being able to access from Linux or a cheap computer with No GPU would make sense.
I don’t think support anything other than what RDP supports, however I’m curious as to how they developed the client. Is there an SDK for RDP 10?
Also, it says $20/month is that unlimited hours? That doesn’t seem expensive at all to me, but maybe I’m reading it wrong....
That's for 80 hours a month.
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Given that ChromeOS runs on Linux I would say that it ushered in the "Year of the Linux Desktop". However, as most have said the trend that is developing is desktop agnostic. Doesn't matter what you run on the desktop as more and more things are becoming cloud based.
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@penguinwrangler said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
Given that ChromeOS runs on Linux I would say that it ushered in the "Year of the Linux Desktop". However, as most have said the trend that is developing is desktop agnostic. Doesn't matter what you run on the desktop as more and more things are becoming cloud based.
Unless you're athenaHealth - where they are going backwards and are currently spending untold millions making a new Windows desktop client because "browsers are to unstable, causing issue for our clients."
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@dashrender said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
@penguinwrangler said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
Given that ChromeOS runs on Linux I would say that it ushered in the "Year of the Linux Desktop". However, as most have said the trend that is developing is desktop agnostic. Doesn't matter what you run on the desktop as more and more things are becoming cloud based.
Unless you're athenaHealth - where they are going backwards and are currently spending untold millions making a new Windows desktop client because "browsers are to unstable, causing issue for our clients."
Read as: "Our ancient software doesn't work with modern web protocols and our programmers are too incompetent to figure out a way for that to work, so we're going to waste a lot of money on something that no one wants because you literally can't go anywhere else."
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@coliver said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
@dashrender said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
@penguinwrangler said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
Given that ChromeOS runs on Linux I would say that it ushered in the "Year of the Linux Desktop". However, as most have said the trend that is developing is desktop agnostic. Doesn't matter what you run on the desktop as more and more things are becoming cloud based.
Unless you're athenaHealth - where they are going backwards and are currently spending untold millions making a new Windows desktop client because "browsers are to unstable, causing issue for our clients."
Read as: "Our ancient software doesn't work with modern web protocols and our programmers are too incompetent to figure out a way for that to work, so we're going to waste a lot of money on something that no one wants because you literally can't go anywhere else."
Sounds good to me.
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@coliver said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
@dashrender said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
@penguinwrangler said in Why hasn’t The Year of the Linux Desktop happened yet? -"Christian F.K. Schaller":
Given that ChromeOS runs on Linux I would say that it ushered in the "Year of the Linux Desktop". However, as most have said the trend that is developing is desktop agnostic. Doesn't matter what you run on the desktop as more and more things are becoming cloud based.
Unless you're athenaHealth - where they are going backwards and are currently spending untold millions making a new Windows desktop client because "browsers are to unstable, causing issue for our clients."
Read as: "Our ancient software doesn't work with modern web protocols and our programmers are too incompetent to figure out a way for that to work, so we're going to waste a lot of money on something that no one wants because you literally can't go anywhere else."
Yep...
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Thanks for reminding me to call Cigna and make sure they properly canceled our healthcare plan