There have been several hints that Valve is working on its own hardware over the last few months. There’s the Steam’s TV-centric Big Picture mode, which recently came out of beta, work on a Linux port that could power "open hardware platforms" and flip-flopping references to a console-like gaming box. But now Gabe Newell is making no secret about the fact that the company will start selling PCs for the living room next year.
Newell also said that Valve probably won't be the only vendor. Other companies should start selling PC packages for living rooms next year, designed to run Steam right out of the box and compete with current and next-generation consoles from Microsoft, Nintendo and Sony.
I think in general that most customers and most developers are gonna find that [the PC is] a better environment for them, because they won't have to split the world into thinking about 'why are my friends in the living room, why are my video sources in the living room different from everyone else?' So in a sense we hopefully are gonna unify those environments.Source: Kotaku
Earlier
this year it was rumored that Valve was working on a PC gaming console
dubbed the Steam Box. The system was expected to ship with a proprietary
controller with swappable components in addition to being compatible
with a range of existing USB peripherals and even with rival gaming
services. Under the hood it was believed to include an Intel Core i7
processor, 8GB of system RAM and an Nvidia GPU.
Source:Tech Spot
View the original link here
Source:Tech Spot
View the original link here
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