No way. I don't beleive it.
Also fuck you Yoda for the following reason:
I have not seen Wall-E. I have nt used Mandriva, and yet every day, at least once a day, I recall your stupid joke from the podcast. What operating system does Wall-E prefer? Maaaan-Dreee-vah!
Gah!
---
Tell me to get back to rewriting this site so it's not horrible on mobileOkay, So Windows is increasingly becoming malware. I use Linum Mint on my laptop, I am now going to look into how to play my steam, itch and amazon games library on linux (or at least how practical it is). I lost most of my internet cap by Windows automatically updating and for that benefit my PC now restarts randomly -- when I can even get it to start, as 3 out of 4 times it blue screens on boot.
---
Tell me to get back to rewriting this site so it's not horrible on mobileEllyoda said:Steam is actually quite Linux friendly now. It handles emulation, so you can just tell it to run a game not even made for Linux and it will figure it out pretty well most of the time.
I use Steam on my linux laptop, but the library support is slim very slim. I will try to run games per your advice above though, good tip.
On push for seeing Linux as a more widespread option is courting OEMs to provide the option of purchasing computers with Linux preinstalled as opposed to Windows, which would naturally allow the system to come at a low price (at full price, the Inspiron Mini 9 from Dell comes in at $100 less). Most prominently, Dell has provided various options in this vein to various degrees of effectiveness.
Lately, though, the primary marketplace has been for the recently popular Netbooks. How popular? Well the numbers are in, and for the Inspiron Mini 9, Linux comprised 33% of all sales.
Regardless of position on the Operating System, more significant competition in the OS retail space is definitely a positive. Dell netbooks come with a modified version of Ubuntu, but don't forget about Mandriva
---
Tell me to get back to rewriting this site so it's not horrible on mobile