I personally think to start petition for FD to do Linux crowdfunding/preorder effort after they finish Mac port. Who's with me? 
<chuckles> You mean the trucks don't have lasers fitted?... but I buy the games I like that are available to me. Currently that's Minecraft and Euro Truck Simulator 2. The latter is more Elite-like than one might suspect... given the lack of combat.
Umm. I upgraded my drive from spindle to fixed and getting from bios, past install, all updates including the mammoth 8.1, Office 2010, VS2013 and several games was 5 hours. Why it took you 24 is beyond me.
isn't Linux for peeps who want it all for free ?
welcome to the real world where everything costs guys
:smilie:
I personally think to start petition for FD to do Linux crowdfunding/preorder effort after they finish Mac port. Who's with me?![]()
So yeah, it took a while. It would have been more sensible to buy a new disk, but it still would have taken a few hours. I should have known Windows could not handle the bad sectors correctly, even when starting from a clean format done the long way.
I only installed it because Frontier are not making their game portable from the beginning. That is not clever at all if you ask me, it's much harder to port a game properly than to code it to be portable in the first place. Still, they are making a great game, and I think it will come to Linux sooner or later. I can forgive their ignorance of the right way to make portable software.
With Linux I can update my ENTIRE system with all applications and drivers, except the very rare ones that are not packaged in the distro, in 1 or 2 hours, non-interactively, by typing "apt-get dist-upgrade" or clicking the equivalent button. During that hour or two while thousands of programs are being upgraded automatically for me, I can go out to the pub and have a beer or a meal. That's a small sample of how much better Linux is than Windows.
To be clear, in this time it is automatically upgrading compilers and programming languages (about 20 of them), office suites, several excellent graphics packages, hundreds or thousands of tools, hundreds of free games, several web servers, a mail server, a DNS server and other internet servers, libraries (DLLs), the kernel (core of the operating system), documentation, TeX, LaTeX and LyX for mathematical typesetting, several programs for typesetting music, several excellent media players, windows compatibility systems, virtualbox qemu and other programs for running other operating systems, emulators for playing games, etc., etc. It would take me half an hour just to describe all the TYPES of software it is dealing with, and it would take at least a month to install or upgrade all this stuff by hand in Windows. If I get a new computer and want to install the same software on it, I just type "apt-get install ..." with a list of the names of the packages; or I install a "meta-package" which brings all the software I need with it. Here is a list of the main packages I install on my systems, there are 405. http://sam.nipl.net/code/nipl-packages/all. This does not include all the essential packages and the support packages these main ones depend on, nor the packages that are considered "standard" by the distribution, including the office suite/s, nor the contents of meta-packages such as kde-full. The total number of packages I am using is well over 2,000. Which can all upgrade automatically with little or no human effort needed. Unlike on Windows.
We Linux users are generally more wealthy than Windows users because Linux is an intelligent choice. Many of us are computer programmers and engineers with high paying jobs in IT. We choose Linux not because Linux costs less than Windows, but because Windows is a piece of junk compared to Linux (or virtually any other operating system); and with Linux we can change, fix, and contribute to any software that might not be working as we need.
I coughed up my 100 quid for Frontier. I have paid for a steam library of 1000 games, a good half of which run on Linux and most of the rest work in wine the "windows quasi-emulator", and almost none of which I would have bought if Valve had not intelligently ported Steam to run on Linux. So yeah, we know how to pay money for things. And the only reason I reinstalled Windows was to play this game, Elite.
Your successful troll was a success, mate!![]()
(...) Personally, I'd be delighted if Elite found its way back into my life through there.
technome, no one is trying to jump ahead of that. However, the question is what is going to be the next platform for Elite: Dangerous. I'm aware of media speculating about next gen consoles but...
Linux port was never offered as a stretch goal during KS and if porting to Linux would be relatively easy then porting to Linux seems logical next step. I'm sure if this kind of stretch goal was offered back then it would have attracted more people to the project. If FD is really thinking about next platforms we think it should be Linux and then X, Y or Z.
But will there be more Linux users than PS4 or XBox users? For that matter nothing I have seen in Elite Dangerous is impossible on the PS3, etc.
Good question, however you could also ask: "But will there be more Mac users than PS4 or XBox users?" and you could probably get the same answer. I'm not going to question Mac's user base commitment however Linux user base isn't any less committed. I simply think Linux port should be the next step mostly because it would be relatively easy and cheap to do it than console port.
Linux port was never offered as a stretch goal during KS and if porting to Linux would be relatively easy then porting to Linux seems logical next step. I'm sure if this kind of stretch goal was offered back then it would have attracted more people to the project. If FD is really thinking about next platforms we think it should be Linux and then X, Y or Z.
It's for certain Linux gamers would appreciate Elite: Dangerous more than Mac gamers would. Anyone gaming under Linux is most likely a giant science fiction fan to begin with, and would appreciate the deep technical nature of Eliteangerous.
But would it be more cheap? They already have an engine that supports the consoles. Does it support Linux?
Well that's a good question but only someone from Frontier Developments could answerI have even better, How much work would it require to port Cobra engine to Linux if it doesn't support it yet?
malware and antivirus software,