VALVE WILL CREATE ITS OWN CAREFULLY MANAGED PC ECOSYSTEM
"Valve has stayed mostly quiet about its
plans to enter the hardware business, but in aninterview
with Kotaku at last night's Video Game Awards, Gabe Newell
confirmed the company's plans to sell its own living room PC that could compete
with next-generation consoles from Sony and Microsoft. The biggest revelation
is that Valve seems set to release its own complete hardware and software
solution. When we first reported that the company was working
on a "Steam Box" back in March, it appeared that Valve was
working on prototype that would establish a baseline for hardware
manufacturers, but it wasn't clear if the company would sell its own product or
simply release the designs to others. Newell's comments to Kotaku provide
a much clearer picture of what's happening; Newell says that he expects
companies to start selling PCs designed for the living room next year — which Kotaku says
could have Steam preloaded — and that Valve will create its own distinct
package.
Newell suggests that the company will create its own
carefully managed PC ecosystem that's distinct from the one offered by other
hardware partners — a possibility that our
own Sean Hollister exposed after looking at the company's comments and
actions in recent years, including its aversion to Windows 8, its recent
embrace of Linux, and its existing push into the living room with
Big Picture Mode. Newell tells Kotaku that "our hardware
will be a very controlled environment," and that some people will want a
"turnkey" solution for their living room.
As a digital distribution platform, Steam is wildly
successful, with more than five
million concurrent users on any given day and over 50 million users in
total (by comparison, Xbox Live has more than 40 million users). But Valve
doesn't reap any income from the sale of hardware that runs its platform or the
software it hosts, and the company doesn't control Windows, which is the most
popular platform among computers running Steam.
Newell stopped short of saying that the company was building a
Linux-based Steam OS, but he reportedly says that the next step for the
company's living room operation is to enable Big Picture on Steam for Linux.
From there, the timeline is still pretty murky — we only know that Newell
expects some hardware to show up sometime next year — but Valve's intent to compete
in the living room in a big way is no longer a secret."Posted from theverge.com
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