Update: Xi3 Opens "Piston" Steam Box Pre-Orders

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Rainforce

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Apr 20, 2009
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Laughing Man said:
There is a problem somewhere. It's impossible for a mechanical drive to be faster than an SSD.
http://s878.beta.photobucket.com/user/laughingman09/media/Image2-1_zps8b5c1f75.jpg.html

I beg to differ, blue line is a pair of mechanical Samsung F3s in Raid 0, red line is a single Vertex 3.0. The Samsungs are clearly faster. Okay I've had to Raid the drives but it is in fact possible for mechanical drives to be faster than an SSD.

As for the Piston, if this in fact the fore runner to Steams own 'console' then it looks like that MS exec was right when he said that Valve proved to be no threat in the console market.
if you go for RAID, then you need to apply the same for the SSD(s).
Even if most people don't know what RAID actually is (apart from an MMO term, heh), don't just throw claims around.
also the problem that the given SSD is hella slow, too.
 

MetallicaRulez0

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So basically it's a $500 PC that you're paying $1000 for.

"I CAN SET $500 ON FIRE? WHERE DO I SIGN UP GUYS?"
 

ClockworkUniverse

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Austin Manning said:
When the original Xbox first came out, that's what Microsoft was pitching it as, a then-modern gaming PC that could be plugged into your television. It's one of the reasons why so many PC/Mac titles (Halo, Morrowind) ended up on the Xbox.
Marketing doesn't make something so. The Xbox is very purely a game console. The focus on porting is a positive trait, but it doesn't make it a PC.
Austin Manning said:
It still strikes me as pointless though, as someone could buy a cheap PC, mod it and plug it into the TV. Or they could just buy a super gaming rig and plug that into their TV. The only way I could see a console/PC hybrid being made simpler (without stripping out modularity and becoming a console) is to redesign the internal components so that they can be easily swapped out for newer version (similar to a gaming cartridge).
A lot of people don't want to put in the effort to learn how to mod a PC, or what to look for in a good PC. They just want to buy a thing and play games on it.
mateushac said:
Well, the idea of gaming on a laptop doesn't appeal very much to me (I hate the position of the keyboard relative to the screen)so I can definitely see what a portable desktop has to offer. Being able to bring my gaming along when visiting my family would be heaven!

Also, a keyboard and a mouse will easily fit a backpack or a suitcase, so it doesn't look like that much of a problem to me.
That's fair. I'm sure this system is great for some people. I'm just not sure how big the "I want a portable PC, but not a laptop, and I don't mind lugging around a keyboard and mouse" market is.
 

mateushac

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ClockworkUniverse said:
mateushac said:
Well, the idea of gaming on a laptop doesn't appeal very much to me (I hate the position of the keyboard relative to the screen)so I can definitely see what a portable desktop has to offer. Being able to bring my gaming along when visiting my family would be heaven!

Also, a keyboard and a mouse will easily fit a backpack or a suitcase, so it doesn't look like that much of a problem to me.
That's fair. I'm sure this system is great for some people. I'm just not sure how big the "I want a portable PC, but not a laptop, and I don't mind lugging around a keyboard and mouse" market is.
Sure, the market for it is VERY niche, but my original comment was specifically about the pricing, which is pretty fair when compared to a laptop (and allowing for a little bit of overpricing due to the whole market pioneering thing)

EDIT: Also, it's not like carrying a mouse/keyboard is any more cumbersome than carrying a gaming laptop.
 

Weaver

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Apr 28, 2008
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Steven Bogos said:
MrPeanut said:
Steven Bogos said:
Evil Smurf said:
I'm actually a fan of mechanical hard drives. The're cheaper and have larger storage. Like terabytes large.
The tradeoff is that SSD's are MUCH faster and much less likely to fail. The update to SSD is probably one of the best upgrades people can make. You only really need the drive that you have windows and your games on to be an SSD, mechanical drives are fine for files. I made the switch to SSD last year and I'll never look back. Windows loads in about 15 seconds and my games load in moments, making 'level loads' almost a thing of the past. It also speeds up your overall performance.
Funny, I got an SSD, timed it in comparison to my mechanical drive.

Games are all the same, windows actually loads faster from a mechanical drive.

And I can assure you it was not a faulty drive :)
I'm not calling you a liar but I find this very hard to believe. Overwhelming evidence supports SSD's being considerably faster than mechanical drives. Even the best mechanical drive caps out at 120 MB/S while modest SSD's are around 300 MB/s. That's a huge difference. There is most likely some kind of fault somewhere in your system. There is no way your windows is loading faster on a mechanical drive than an SSD
I need mechanical hard drive. I have 5 terabytes of storage, it's nearly full.
SSD's are still pitifully small in size for my needs. When games are now 15 gigs or more, and you have a steam library of 400+ games SSD's are just too small, IMO.
 

EHKOS

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Feb 28, 2010
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Sounds like Apples pricing model for adding more space. Seriously I can buy a 512GB SSD for $300 and they want us to pay $750?!
 

zumbledum

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jebbo said:
Doesn't this kind of defeat the point of the accessible, cheap Steambox? I thought the whole ethos of the Steambox was to create something affordable that could compete with a console price point. By effectively being at least twice the price of what we can probably expect a PS4 to be for the lowest entry model then they've just shot themselves in the foot.
this isn't the valve steam box, the author is being very misleading to make the story more interesting, this is a form factor PC that's going to be utilizing the steam format, now does that just mean the big screen function or the whole kit i doesn't say.

and people in general need to get alot smarter about console costs. consoles are always sold at a loss the idea is they massively over charge per game bought to recoup that loss.

if i were to replicate my library on console my 2k high end gaming pc would be about 3-4k cheaper than a ps3/4

As to what the steambox or the range of products falling under the umbrella do or are no one knows yet we haven't seen one but i think its pretty unlikely they would go in competition of the current consoles, the loss leader console make it back on licences wont really work because steam box games will be 30 bucks more than the pc version.

i would expect valve to follow the same type of practice they always do my complete guess is something like buy the steambox for XXX and you get 100 games of your choice free. it fits their model accounts for their strength and would blow the competition out of the water price wise.
 

direkiller

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mateushac said:
I don't understand what everyone had been expecting. This is a pretty impressive rig for its size (granted we don't know its GPU yet). Alienware's M14x [http://www.dell.com/us/p/alienware-m14x-r2/pd.aspx] sells for $999 and the poor thing comes with a pitiful 6GB of RAM, a GT650M (not amazing by any stretch of imagination) and a mechanical hard drive. If I were to choose between the two, I'd probably go with the piston.
Alienware is a poor comparson choice

like apple they overcharge and under preform in terms of performance. You are better off comparing it to a high end dell,because they are the same thing(Dell owns AW),it's just cheaper and less LED's.

OT:
The problem is
A. Most people who want a computer can get a better one for cheeper(build it or buy it)
B. People who want a console are not gona spend more then the TV they will hook this thing up to.
C. it has non of the side functionally(typeing program,printer, outer games,work,ecd) of a computer for all the cost

IMO this thing is gonna bomb hard unless they drop the price way down. At it's current price I just don't see a market for this.
 

PoolCleaningRobot

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The Plunk said:
It may be pricey, but it's also the SIZE OF A GODDAMN GRAPEFRUIT.

This is probably the most portable gaming machine outside of handhelds and smartphones. Probably a lot more powerful too. If the specs are as good (or better) than a high-end gaming laptop, I can see this being well worth the money for people that travel a lot.
Probably the best point in favor of this thing. It's crazy portable. I could see a few people getting a lot of use out of something so small
 

Tradjus

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Apr 25, 2011
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This is a pretty ridiculous screwup on these guy's part. I mean, seriously, expecting people too shell out a thousand bucks before they've even told us what sort of GPU the thing has?. It could have an Nvidia 8600 in it for all we know. Besides that, the thing is just overpriced as it is, I understand wanting too make a novelty top range mini-computer but this is not the way in my opinion.
 

Epic Fail 1977

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Dec 14, 2010
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Without more detailed specs I don't think we can draw any conclusions on value for money.

There is a PC graphics card on the market right now that costs $1000 all on its own.

mdqp said:
You can pre-order it now... And yet not all of the specifications have been revealed? Isn't that a bit odd?
Yes it is. Mind you, some game developer allowed pre-orders on an unrevealed game recently, so go figure.

The Plunk said:
It may be pricey, but it's also the SIZE OF A GODDAMN GRAPEFRUIT.
Exactly. The smaller you make a PC, the more expensive it gets.
 

Crazie_Guy

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Okay, so it's going to be about as expensive as a normal computer of the same specs. Erm... what was the point of this again?
 

Dryk

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Crazie_Guy said:
Okay, so it's going to be about as expensive as a normal computer of the same specs. Erm... what was the point of this again?
You were seriously expecting it to be smaller AND cheaper? Engineering isn't magic...
 

Ironman126

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Apr 7, 2010
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Evil Smurf said:
I'm actually a fan of mechanical hard drives. The're cheaper and have larger storage. Like terabytes large.
They are also far more reliable than solid state drives. I'd take reliability, low cost, and more storage over an (marginal) improvement of data transfer speed any day.
 

WouldYouKindly

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I can buy a more powerful PC for less. I can also do a lot more with that 1k PC than this Steam Box. Case in point

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883227444 (It just might explode on you or be the wrong computer entirely, or be put together wrong, or anything else really, but shit, what do you want for 700 bucks?)

I do like the name though. It's powered by Steam and is called Piston, that's just perfect.
 

direkiller

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Ironman126 said:
Evil Smurf said:
I'm actually a fan of mechanical hard drives. The're cheaper and have larger storage. Like terabytes large.
They are also far more reliable than solid state drives. I'd take reliability, low cost, and more storage over an (marginal) improvement of data transfer speed any day.
I think in this case it is the size of the object.
As SSD are smaller and if you are designing the SSD yourself, as there are no moving parts, you could make it fit diffidently on your mini computer.
Also Judging by the back of this thing they fully expect people to hook an external up to it.
 

iniudan

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Apr 27, 2011
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Ironman126 said:
Evil Smurf said:
I'm actually a fan of mechanical hard drives. The're cheaper and have larger storage. Like terabytes large.
They are also far more reliable than solid state drives. I'd take reliability, low cost, and more storage over an (marginal) improvement of data transfer speed any day.
Actually that the opposite, an SSD is more reliable since it got no mechanical part, SSD tend to die very early or at their maximum write durability, HD just tend to fail randomly. So basically just put an SSD into test reliability for a week or two to check if can be integrated. With HD there no point beyond a double pass check, has anything beyond a bad unit is just random.

What a hard drive got is more endurance, has an SSD got a limited number of write possible, while a HD is pretty much unlimited until the mechanical part fail or degrade beyond usability. But that usually beyond the care of consumer, has most don't have enough disk and/or a high enough I/O to disk for endurance to be a buying point.
 

Occams_Razor

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Oct 20, 2012
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Everyone should keep in mind, that these are 'early adopter' prices. Like all releases in technology, prices will get more reasonable for your average consumer as popularity increases. Remember how much an LCD TV cost you back in the day?

I see a large amount of potential on a pre-built, Valve-supported turnkey PC. If they can eventually bring in down to console prices, a single, predictable architecture would be a much better way to develop games.
 

LazyAza

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So this and Steambox are just computers for your living room specialized for gaming but can be modified and upgraded like a PC. Makes sense to me. Would be cool if it just ran steam without a need for windows and all the usual requirements of games through windows were somehow intact.