• sudoku@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    You can’t BIOS-update the battery size or the CPU node. The gains will be minimal…

  • Kushan@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I just want to know if they’ll let me replace the screen. I can live with the battery but I’d love an OLED screen.

  • Chariotwheel@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    On one hand I kinda feel bad because I just recently bought a Steamdeck on Valve’s word that there won’t be new Steamdeck for a few years, but then again, it still works and it will work until the next iteration, maybe a Steamdeck. I would still kinda feel better if Valve didn’t make that obviously misleading statement, given that they worked on a steamdeck that is lighting better in all aspects for a long time.

    • conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      That’s not what they said, though. That might be how it was characterized in whatever retelling you heard, but their comments have always been very specific that a new, more powerful successor wasn’t coming any time soon. They never said anything implying they wouldn’t update it at all.

      This is the same performance target, just with a nicer finish.

    • Gabagoolzoo@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It’s wild reading comments like these, because I thought they made it painfully obvious. All the headlines from that interview clearly delineated that they were talking about a “faster Steam Deck” aka a Steam Deck 2 and not a hardware refresh. Like here’s a Verge article from September

      “changing the performance level is not something we are taking lightly… I don’t anticipate such a leap to be possible in the next couple of years”

      All that said, Valve might totally still have a Steam Deck refresh in the works that doesn’t change the performance floor. There’s a rich history of console manufacturers releasing smaller, lighter, and more power efficient versions of the same hardware…