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Steamos 3.7 brings the gaming operating system from Valve to other handhelds and generic AMD PCs

    The instructions of Valve will go through you by downloading a Steamos recovery image and copying to a USB station using the Rufus tool (on Windows) or Balena Etcher (the preferred macos and Linux Utility). After you have switched off the shot of security, you should be able to start up from the USB station and install Steamos as you would do on a normal steam deck.

    Note that there is no simple, officially supported way to make Steamos and Windows with a double boat; If you decide to create your handheld, laptop or desktop in a new steam engine, the only way to return to a Windows PC to re-enable Secure Boot is to install a new copy of another USB station.

    The Steamos 3.7 -Update (Official, version 3.7.8) also contains a number of other updates for the underlying software: version 6.11 of the Linux Kernel (Up From Version 6.5 in Steamos 3.6), “A NEWERRE Arch Linux Base”, Version 6.2.5 of the Plasma -Interfodus and Different Mesa and Different Mesa and Different Mesa and Different Mesa, Differente Mesa and Different Mesa's Departments and Various Mesa, Department Faces and Various Mesa's Dakepop Modus and Various Mesa, Deprialface, and Various Mesa. And other tweaks and other tweaks and other tweaks and other tweaks and other tweaks and other tweaks and other tweaks and bugs.

    A second act for Steamos

    The original version of Steamos is designed to be On a large scale compatible with all kinds of PC hardware and was available at both large PC manufacturers and a standing operating system that you could (and what we did) to measure, install, install Self -built PCs. But these computers and that version of Steamos usually flopped, at least partly because they only performed a small subset of games that supported Linux native.

    The current version of Steamos was launched with more modest goals such as the first-party operating system for a single piece of hardware. But by first concentrating on the problem problem of the game compatibility and leading the road with category -seeing hardware, Valve has actually built a much stronger basis for the current version of Steamos than for the original.

    That does not make Steamos a drop-in replacement for Windows without strong support for Intel or Nvidia-Hardware, it is not a great candidate for most gaming PCs, or even by Intel driven Gaming handhelds such as the MSI Claw A1M. And Windows is set up as a multifunctional operating system for general use in ways that Steamos is not; Valve still says that despite the presence of desktop mode, “Users Steamos should not consider a replacement for their desktop operating system.” But for certain types of systems that are mainly used as gaming pcs, Steamos is a real candidate.