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- Steam Deck stock returns but there's a big price increase
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Anticheat check - which competitive games actually work on Linux?
How to give Valve feedback when Proton games have issues on Linux / SteamOS
Microsoft is trying to run it's own protonDB alternative for their switch to ARM and :shock: anti-cheat is the biggest hurdle.
They've emulators instead of Wine(windows)/Waydroid(android)/Darling(mac) and they've already ported Microsoft office, but the story is pretty similar.
I'm curious do their emulators also emulate the secret instructions Intel seems to be including specially for them?
I hope their push to ARM is long and painful, but in the end succeeds.
:grin:
https://psdevwiki.com/ps3/images/c/cd/PS3_-_COK-001_-_labels.jpg
shouldn't it be enough to have a marker included in the code which tells the CPU which instruction set you want to run and then the correct translation unit is activated that processes them? isn't it: current CPUs don't implement the actual instructions anymore but convert it to micro-code / µ-ops which then are actually executed... so it's all risc CPUs nowadays... having multiple cores/CPUs of which only a few are used sounds like a huge waste of money / space / energy (they use power also in standby) / etc.
Thanks for the assurance that those instructions don't seem to be kept secret with the goal to keep back potential Windows competitors and/or emulators in check and that each and every of these instructions is intended to in the future be available to non-Windows users.
Although "adding specific features on Microsoft's request you don't tell anybody else about until much later" is still introducing secret instructions specifically for Microsoft, but at least it doesn't seem to be intentional.
That really eases some of my fears.
Microsoft is the only one I knew had access to this kind of stuff(this is obviously under NDA's and such, so I get my info from reverse engineering efforts and leaks).