• Björn Tantau
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    61 year ago

    In case this is not a joke, Steam only runs on x86 processors. The Vita has an ARM processor. But I bet someone made some Linux that runs on the Vita. Just not with Steam games.

    • shroomad
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      31 year ago

      it’s not a joke, I don’t know shit about processors

      • @woelkchen
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        01 year ago

        it’s not a joke, I don’t know shit about processors

        You could use google…

        • shroomad
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          11 year ago

          I did, “steam os run on vita” didn’t give me anything. I’m not about to learn all about processors to answer this simple question lol that’s silly

          • @woelkchen
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            1 year ago

            Can SteamOS run on PlayStation Vita and if not why not?

            • shroomad
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              11 year ago

              thanks, I still rather ask humans than an AI that doesn’t know how to bake a cake

      • @FailBait
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        31 year ago

        Rosetta. But part of the CPU had x86 translation functions built in to help so not as useful here.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Wine and Rosetta are fundamentally different things. Wine is a reimplementation of Windows APIs on Linux, whereas Rosetta is hardware emulation (famously, Wine Is Not an Emulator).

        The equivalent of Rosetta on Linux is QEMU, and specifically qemu-user-static.

        The thing about hardware emulation, though, is that it has a non-trivial processor overhead. Apple Silicon gets away with it because it’s a very fast chip which has been designed partly with hardware emulation in mind. Trying to emulate x86 on some generic off-the-shelf mobile ARM chip is not going to give great results.