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by ajd1988 1124 days ago
So if I'm getting this right, the Steam Deck is shaping up to be less of a gaming console and more of a portable DevOps station with a gaming side gig. Guess we're approaching the era where one can fill out an expense report for the boss and sau "I bought this gaming console for development" with a straight face.

Loving the trend, though. Between Distrobox and Docker, containers seem to be the inescapable "Matryoshka dolls" of the tech world.

But all jokes aside, the flexibility this provides is impressive. If you told me a few years ago that I'd be able to run a full Ubuntu environment on a handheld gaming device, I would've raised an eyebrow

2 comments

No, the Steam Deck is a gaming console. It just isn't deliberately locked out and the fact that it's a computer underneath is left there for you to use if you want.

If you want a portable DevOps station, you want a cheap laptop. You don't want to use the default Steam Deck keyboard for much more than entering a login name or something. A Steam Deck with a keyboard plugged into it is much closer to a desktop setup than anything I'd call portable.

But portability is the only question. It's still a full computer. It just isn't a very convenient one for anything other than games.

I personally do use it a lot like a Nintendo Switch, though. You can easily have a desktop-like setup at home behind a dock, and then pop it out and carry it off portably. It's not quite as slick as a Switch but it works. But, again, this is a desktop setup with the Deck standing in as the computer, not a portable setup.

Close but I'd say it's more like a handheld console with a Chromebook attached.

Steam Deck apps (mostly) have to come from a Flatpak repo to install correctly but Flathub (the default repo and therefore defacto app store on the Steam Deck) has lots of the common apps for daily use, even if they are largely unofficial/unsupported versions. So for 95% of people, it's definitely usable as a laptop/desktop replacement, but if you want to develop or want stuff outside the Flatpak repos, it's a bit of a hassle.

That said, I love this thing.