The developer team at Discord released a new engineering blog post yesterday (December 8th) detailing lots of fixes, along with some Linux improvements. As one of the most popular chat apps in the world, it’s good to see their support of Linux continue to get better over time.

  • R00bot@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 days ago

    Why are we saying Linux PCs AND steam deck? The steam deck is just a Linux PC. Unless custom work was done for it?

    • arendjr@programming.dev
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      3 hours ago

      It may be a kind of Linux PC, but it’s not just a Linux PC. (Also not a fan of the American language…)

    • Blisterexe@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      Everyone else in this comments section didn’t read the article lmao, it’s because they did steam deck specific fixes.

      Go Live on Steamdeck is now faster with zero-copy encoding from Gamescope, making it possible to share the action with your friends without burning up your Steamdeck.

      • R00bot@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 day ago

        Yea you’re right. I read the article after commenting and realised my mistake lol. Some of the replies have been entertaining though.

    • Dremor@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      A lot of custom work was done for it. Custom drivers, custom window manager, most of it upstreamed, if not all. It is not as different as an Android Phone, but I believe we can say it is not primarily a Linux PC, but rather an handheld that comes with an integrated Linux PC.

        • Dremor@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          So is any Android phone in such case. Form factor matters.
          The Deck is a Linux handheld, that can be converted to a Linux PC depending on the accessories used. But by itself, with no accessories whatsoever, good luck using it as a PC.
          A laptop can be considered as a PC, as it has all the peripheral integrated into his chassis, a desktop too (as it cannot be used without peripherals, they can be counted as part of it), but a Deck primary use is handheld gaming, not personal computing. Its included peripherals cannot allow it use as such.

          • cassandrafatigue@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 days ago

            It’s… Not a desktop?

            It is a personal computer, it runs Linux, I recognize KDE, I can fuck around in terminal. In what ways is it not a personal computer? I don’t understand.

            Also, are you a llm from like 2021?

            • Dremor@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              Also, are you a llm from like 2021?

              I’m a human with an opinion you may not share, for whom English is not his primary language. So grammatical error are to be expected. Now if you can come down of your high horse and not assume anyone with whom you do not agree is a LLM, that’d be great.

              It is a personal computer, it runs Linux, I recognize KDE, I can fuck around in terminal. In what ways is it not a personal computer? I don’t understand.

              Try to do a spreadsheet on the deck without any accessory. It is possible, but very fastidious. It isn’t an hardware made to do personal computing (aka, a PC), it is an hardware to play game.
              A PC isn’t just a software, it is also a hardware specifically made to allow various computing tasks. Calculus, graphical work of various kinds, sometimes games (which have to adapt to peripherals that weren’t made for games in mind).
              A Deck is made for games first, and the various other task you may want to do have to work around its limitation. From my point of view, this cannot be called a PC.
              But that’s my opinion, I won’t force anyone else to agree with me, or call them a LLM out of spite.

              • I mean, try to do a spreadsheet on a PC without any accessories. You can’t, because there’s no monitor, keyboard, mouse, etc… All accessories. By this logic, only laptops can really be called PCs.

                Replace any desktop tower with a Steam Deck and you’ll find it’s perfectly capable of doing the same job.

                • Dremor@lemmy.world
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                  23 hours ago

                  A desktop computer cannot be used without peripheral (unless you use it as a server). They where separated from the chassis for flexibility sake, not because they were optional.
                  There was a time where everything was integrated into the chassis, screen included. Those were hefty beasts, loud, and hard to maintain, because when a peripheral broke, you had to service the whole unit instead of swapping the keyboard to a new one.

                  As for the Deck, you have everything you need for its intended use, no peripheral needed. Of course, you can add some to make it work like a PC, but in such case, is it still only a Deck ?

                  We could argue for ages around that, but I think it boils down to philosophy. Some prefers maximalist definition, other prefer minimalist definition. I’m obviously of the later school, and you of the former.
                  So, how about we agree to have different opinions on the matter, and go on our respective way, instead of throwing oil on the fire of a sterile debate ?

    • LiveLM@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      For the common Joe who has a Steam Deck and doesn’t really care if it’s powered by Linux or BSD or whatever