The Official Story
Here's a video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8PMUvuHK4g
The Official Story
Here's a video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8PMUvuHK4g
This is great news.
Thanks King Dude.
I learn something ubuntu everyday.
dell precision T7500 1Tb hdd x 2
2.67 Ghz intel xeon X5550 cpu
nvidia quadro fx 4800-1.5 Gb video card
Cool video. Thanks for sharing!
Joining LF in and of itself is no big deal, Adobe is a member of LF for a long time. (Not to diminish the impact of Valve, just saying being a member of LF in and of itself means nothing )
No disagreement with that. I am only saying that being a member of LF in and of itself is no big deal, as Adobe is also a LF member, it has abysmal support for Linux to begin with and it is dropping whatever support it has (the process is almost complete now that even acroread is gone, though I never use it)
Last edited by monkeybrain20122; December 5th, 2013 at 05:56 PM.
Yep. Adobe Flash 11.2 is the last supported version for Linux with backported security fixes, but that is Adobe. At least we have a native Flash player for Linux. Valve is really pushing for Linux support. Almost all their games have Linux ports, SteamOS runs on Linux. Its good to finally see a big name like Valve supporting Linux.
Maybe they just joined to get the dell/hp/lenovo discounts
https://www.linuxfoundation.org/abou...ndividual/join
Being a member of the Linux Foundation has nothing to do with building something for Linux. Members of the LF either have a certain amount of man hours dedicated to building the Linux Kernel or make a certain financial donation. A good example of this is Samsung, they do not build anything for Linux but instead make hefty financial donations to the LF. Adobe Flash being proprietary is not what made them a member of the LF, it is either developer hours or money.
We all know Linux is great... it does infinite loops in 5 seconds.
- Linus Torvald
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