Contend6248
Ok, keep it for the next 100 years and get custom build hardware which can run that stuff, that's cheap and safe.
Never touch anything
Running two systems simultaneously for a couple of days, that's a huge problem, not solvable
Just make it from scratch?
For sure there is so much useless shit in there, that's why nobody gets their head around it anymore.
Also bureaucracy is through the roof in everything, i have no idea who the fuck thinks of germany as efficient.
Is it broke if no one is able to fix it?
The reason for it to run on such an ancient device is because nobody wants to touch the scripts running on these devices.
A VPN from someone i've heard for the first time?
Count me in!!
Some are very rich people, so i see no difference in supporting a big studio or someone with a big mansion and 5 sport cars tbh.
I support people trying to make a living with content either of us enjoys.
Vanguard is being bypassed as well, but users have now a compromised system to the lowest level possible.
So that isn't the solution, i would somewhat understand it if no one is able to cheat anymore, but as long as there are hacks available you can give up on kernel level anti-cheat.
It's not only interests of the chinese government, they HAVE to oblige legally if they are asked to. So even if the company has the best intentions, the government overrules.
And don't make that a chinese bad guy argument, as if western companies aren't doing the same, they just don't do that officially, which one is shadier is yours to decide.
All you can do as a company or anyone is to stop harvesting data and don't plant blackboxes/backdoors in customers systems
The original SteamOS is based on Debian, https://store.steampowered.com/steamos
I guess backporting everything was a pain.
SteamOS 2.0 which is used on Steamdeck (and only available on Steamdeck officially) has nothing to do with that.
They could and they would if they wouldn't profit from this in the end,
for some reasons there is no official Flatpak and they don't want to support a Snap package, they just say anything but the *.deb is unsupported, kinda weird because they use the Flatpak package on Steamdeck because that is Arch-based, i guess they are somewhat involved there.
As much as they do for the Linux movement, they should get their shit together when it comes to a cross-distro client, preferably Flatpak obviously.