this post was submitted on 25 May 2025
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Steam Deck

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A place to discuss and support all things Steam Deck.

Replacement for r/steamdeck_linux.

As Lemmy doesn't have flairs yet, you can use these prefixes to indicate what type of post you have made, eg:
[Flair] My post title

The following is a list of suggested flairs:
[Discussion] - General discussion.
[Help] - A request for help or support.
[News] - News about the deck.
[PSA] - Sharing important information.
[Game] - News / info about a game on the deck.
[Update] - An update to a previous post.
[Meta] - Discussion about this community.

Some more Steam Deck specific flairs:
[Boot Screen] - Custom boot screens/videos.
[Selling] - If you are selling your deck.

These are not enforced, but they are encouraged.

Rules:

Link to our Matrix Space

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Source is this video:

Windows Was The Problem All Along - Dave2D

We could obviously compare performance between windows and steamOS before on the steam deck, or between windows and Bazzite on other handhelds. But this is the first time we have had official windows and SteamOS builds for the same hardware.

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[–] [email protected] 32 points 5 days ago (3 children)

I think there's in play also background activity from Windows' bloat.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 5 days ago

Probably this. Especially on low end hardware that doesn't really have a lot of background resources to give.

Just open task manager and see all the shit windows thinks is essential to run all the time. Scanning the drive for viruses, downloading updates for shit you've never even looked at...

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

They say I/O schedulers on Windows are weird.

Edit: or was it CPU schedulers? I'm sure i've read something about this forever ago.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Yes/no.

The linux scheduler is a work of art - heuristics to dynamically determine resource access priority, checks for resource locking that are some of the most elegant pieces of code written by humanity, incredibly adaptable and clever. It took me the better part of a year before I really understood the underlaying mechanics, and even now I could by no means reproduce it on my own. It's truly an amazing bit of mathematics.
...
Windows solves the same problem by randomly elevating processes to maximum priority. That's it, that's the whole algorithm.

Depressingly, they're equally effective.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago

You'd think anyone techliterate would disable the bloat.