Hmm, and I was hoping Valve officially opened SteamOS to 3rd party vendors. A bit odd that they haven't done this yet.
I expect this is simply a case of "Valve Time" on that effort. Perhaps there's a long-term path towards more "official" SteamOS on these devices, but if there's any area where HoloISO diverges technically from SteamOS in a way that's not reconcilable, that'll be problematic for offering users a "seamless upgrade".
Long-term, I think it would be slightly more harmful to Valve's efforts if more manufacturers started standardizing around HoloISO, so I expect that this might be a motivating factor to speed up their efforts to bring official SteamOS to third-party devices.
Well, maintaining a distro specific to your hardware is one thing, supporting it for others - that's a huge undertaking.
Hopefully the make some upstream contributions so linux gaming keeps getting better.
Any runors on its specs or pricing?
Not that I've seen, but we'll learn more in less than a day
I think HoloISO is a good target for compatibility. Valve hasn't released a generic ISO for steam OS yet but much of their efforts have made their way upstream. They've then landed into other projects like chimera and bazzite. Since this device hardware targets HoloISO it should mean that it will be easier to install other operating systems on it and get full functionality.
I see this as an absolute win.
Why HoloISO and not Bazzite?
Wouldn't Bazzite be the better choice?
Linux Gaming
Gaming on the GNU/Linux operating system.
Recommended news sources:
Related chat:
Related Communities:
Please be nice to other members. Anyone not being nice will be banned. Keep it fun, respectful and just be awesome to each other.