SteamOS is immutable. While you can unlock the root filesystem pacman needs a little bit more setup to work. And updating with pacman might break stuff. And everything you do with it will be lost on a proper SteamOS update.
What exactly do you want to achieve? Why do you not just use SteamOS’s own update mechanism?
Haven’t worked with canvas in a while and I haven’t looked at your code. But I remember from several canvas frameworks that if you want to animate multiple things it is much more performant to do it in multiple canvas elements.
Don’t have the energy to play myself. But started watching a Let’s Play today and I really love the premise.
It’s usually just one command to run.
Oh, also the biggest difference between Linux and Windows is that you don’t go to different websites to install new software. In general you use your distribution’s package manager. Think of it like a software center.
Going to a website to download software is a last ditch effort if your distribution doesn’t have what you are looking for.
Will my ability to play games be significantly affected compared to Windows?
Many games with draconian anti cheat don’t work. You can check that on https://areweanticheatyet.com/ and https://www.protondb.com/.
Can I mod games as freely and as easily as I do on Windows?
Do you mean creating or applying mods? Some of the tools might not run out of the box. But for most mods you actually just have to place the files in the correct folder.
If a program has no Linux version, is it unusable, or are there workarounds?
Can Linux run programs that rely on frameworks like .NET or other Windows-specific libraries?
Wine is the program used to run Windows software. It is used by Steam together with some other tools under the name Proton or Steam Play. It is best to use Wine with a helper frontend like Bottles. That creates an encapsulated Windows environment for every program and helps you in keeping potentially conflicting workarounds separate from each other.
But you can also run Wine standalone. Then every program will be installed to the same fake-Windows environment.
Missing libraries like .Net or the Visual C++ Runtime are actually the most common pitfall when trying to run Windows software on Linux. Bottles, Steam and other helpers will aid in their installation.
How do OS updates work in Linux? Is there a “Linux Update” program like what Windows has?
Every distribution has an application repository that also contains the system files. In general you update everything at once through one interface.
How does digital security work on Linux? Is it more vulnerable due to being open source? Is there integrated antivirus software, or will I have to source that myself?
Open source makes it more safe. You have more eyes on the software. And something that is only safe because nobody knows how it works isn’t really safe.
Antivirus software’s is not necessary. Neither is it necessary on Windows. It makes a system less secure because it opens up more possibilities of something going wrong. There have been enough cases of anti virus software with security issues on Windows. Or even anti virus software attacking important system files directly.
That said, if you still want to install a virus scanner there is ClamAV.
Are GPU drivers reliable on Linux
AMD and Intel greatly, because they are open source. They are integrated and don’t need any configuration or installation.
Nvidia is worse. You have to install them yourself and sometimes they are unstable. But it’s not worse than on Windows.
Can Linux (in the case of a misconfiguration or serious failure) potentially damage hardware?
Only if you really try and even then it’s probably impossible. Hardware nowadays has many safeguards.
And also, what distro might be best for me?
If you have friends or family already using Linux you should install what they use.
I like OpenSUSE Tumbleweed.
Valve recommend against using NTFS for the Steam library on Linux. I don’t know the specifics as to what could go wrong…
Correct. The whole thing is lauded as this revolutionary new thing but in reality it’s just a bullshit VM isolated from the rest of the system. We have had that almost for as long as Android existed. Along with Termux and similar that actually can access everything.
Yeah, but that means that not the entire storage is available like the headline implies.
Press X to doubt.
The root filesystem will very likely still be locked down.
I use email.
My first time trying out Linux was with a bootable CD from a PC gaming magazine. It was Corel Linux. If I recall correctly it booted into KDE.
Unfortunately on my system the mouse cursor was invisible. The mouse worked, I just couldn’t see where the cursor was. My brother who was using Linux full time couldn’t help me fix it.
Sometimes they still look at a petition even if it didn’t reach the threshold. At least that has been the case for German petitions.
In the end they still get ignored, whether they reached the threshold or not.
It’s totally unproblematic to use an existing encrypted partition even without a separate home partition. You just unlock your drive and delete everything except for home. Never encountered a single installer that couldn’t handle it.
We’ve known since the 2010s that brown equals realism.
Or make a fake app for the Play Store where all the reports go to /dev/null.
Yeah. Sometimes we’re lucky and get a leak of the cancelled game. Happened with the War Craft adventure game. It was almost finished. And it was really mid. Maybe up to today’s Blizzard standards but not back then.
Valve have supposedly been experimenting with x86 emulation on ARM for their next VR headset. So I think they might actually be well on their way to enter that market. Probably with the plan of making PC games playable on Android.
I mean, that depends on the watch and could be exactly how it works.