Why Steam on Linux matters for non-gamers
Posted Oct 2, 2013 18:29 UTC (Wed) by
khim (subscriber, #9252)
In reply to:
Why Steam on Linux matters for non-gamers by krake
Parent article:
Why Steam on Linux matters for non-gamers
The time to the upload is controlled by the developer, the time from the channel is controlled by the user.
Only if user is adventurous enough to play with "unstable" channels. Most users don't want to visit unstable channels which can very well kill their system to receive stable version of software.
The distributor can of course influence those, e.g. by restricting bandwidth, but why would they?
They are doing for various reasons, but usually new version only pushed to stable "channel" when new stable version of distribution is released. Which may take months if you are lucky or years if you are not.
I have no experience with Ubuntu, so just to be sure: you are saying that Canonical shop redirects you to a vendor controlled download server once the purchase is completed?
No. It gives you access to the app store which looks like a typical app store, where you only need to grant the right to distribute you application under certain conditions, where you can verify license keys, etc. When Oracle decided to retire Operating System Distributor License for Java Java was removed from Ubuntu store, e.g.
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