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Valve runs its massive PC gaming ecosystem with only about 350 employees
(arstechnica.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Steam is successful because they're the only company in that market treating customers right.
I'd be very upset if the courts side with EA.
and because they are not publicly traded company.
Well that's why they actually do right by their customers. That said I definitely agree
They're also one of the few (possibly only) that has not gone public.
Just a coincidence, I'm sure.
There are plenty of private companies that are shitty too. It definitely helps being private (and maybe is a requirement?), but you also have to have the right owners for private companies to be good.
For sure... Just one more reason to adopt co-determination laws like those in Germany.
Public or private, if the board of the company actually contained literal workers, it could make things so much better.
Wait what's going on in the courts between valve and EA?
What are EA doing with Valve? The lawsuit this came from is between Wolfire Games and Valve; far as I can tell, Valve and EA work together on some stuff.
Steam could use better search. Ideally I'd like to be able to just use SQL, but I understand why not.
There's been a few times where I wanted to find something in Steam, but spent most of the emotion on clicks and fucks before launching something, concluding that yeah, I wanted this, and stopping it because I don't want this anymore.
Steam DB has a pretty decent search. It's not SQL but the filters are a bit better.
I know how you feel tho - so few consumer orgs give us an advanced search worth it's salt. I want to have (x AND y) OR z, or maybe x AND (y OR z)... Not whichever specific combination was preordained for me.
I know it's not as horrible as some.
If only this were still a thing in search engines.
I still can't figure out how their search filters work.
It always blocks games with violence whether I have all filters checked or unchecked