Are you trying to tell me that there are tons of steam machines, some that meet your needs and some that satisfy varying needs and wants? It's like they're trying to give people options.
INSANITY!
INSANITY!

Uhh... Nope? You're acting as if there weren't any i7-compatible Mini-ITX/Micro-ATX boards, or no PCI-Express on them. You're not forced to use AMD APU's at all.If you want a small form factor desktop PC that can also play games, right now, you have to do a custom build using a mini-ITX board and an AMD APU. Problem is, those have such weak CPU's your pushing it when you run emulators, and they run hotter than the sun and eat through power.
Uhh... Nope? You're acting as if there weren't any i7-compatible Mini-ITX/Micro-ATX boards, or no PCI-Express on them. You're not forced to use AMD APU's at all.
Let's see...
http://pcpartpicker.com/p/2CYXb
Quad-Core i7 + Dual GTX760 4+4GB VRAM 2-Way SLI + 16GB DDR3 RAM + misc. junk required to get this setup to work - wipes the floor with the higher-end Steam Machines and it's "just" $1289 with shipping included. Turn this thing on at your own peril - the sheer amount of horsepower might cause it to obtain sentience, take off and fly into space to meet otherworldly civilizations.
...would you like me to build you a "less kick-ass" one?![]()

You're not going to get performance if you're not willing to pay your electric bill. Energy consumption has nothing to do with overheating or with being "super loud". Those Steam Machines aren't going to be 80W either, so I don't see your point.Yes please!
Please build me one that fits in this case. It has to be that big so it can sit on a shelf in my entertainment system next to my 20TB storage array. I would like it to be able to run Dolphin at 1080p, be a file server (and maybe a Minecraft server) when not in use, so keep the energy consumption low. I also don't want it to pull any more than... let's say 80W from the wall - any more than that and it will overheat/be super loud.
Thanks in advance for your help!
You're not going to get performance if you're not willing to pay your electric bill. Energy consumption has nothing to do with overheating or with being "super loud".
Those Steam Machines aren't going to be 80W either, so I don't see your point.


Lots of heat? Buy a good radiator and a fan - done. The fact that you generate heat doesn't mean that you can't dissipate it.As far as I am aware, energy consumption in processors/graphics cards is directly related to the heat they generate. Unless your generating light, sound, or huge arcing bolts of electricity. The recommended limit of that case is actually 65W. So, energy consumption really has everything to do with overheating and being super loud.
The Brix Pro uses a crappy on-die Intel HD chip, it's worse than an AMD APU. You asked for a rig that will pull off 1080p Dolphin - this certaily will not.The Gigabyte Brix Pro is ~65W. The Alienware and Maingear are probably close to that.
I'm arguing that you can easily build an equivalent or superior machine for an equivalent or lower sum of money with relative ease.I'm not sure what you're even arguing anymore.
I'll agree with the "very few OEM's" part, I disagree with the "new class of a machine" because it really isn't, all things considered.My point has been, and remains, that this was an opportunity to create a whole new class of machine, but very few OEM's took the opportunity, and even fewer did it well.
I do, I did from the very start. In that case, a simple i5 rig with an R270 on-board should serve you well and consume no more than 220W under full-on stress, ten times less when in Sleep Mode.The Alienware Steam machine prototype is literally the only machine in existence (or at least, soon to be in existence) that fits the use case of a general purpose home theatre PC. I will most likely be getting that one come fall, and pay way over the odds for it because there is literally zero competition.
To further clarify (because we seem to have gotten way, way, WAY off the point here):
No, I'm not saying I want a Godzilla gaming rig next to my TV. I cannot justify the noise, cost and eyesore of a quad SLI system consuming half of my entertainment center so that I can run Crysis 3 at 120fps in 4K with maximum detail.
No, I'm not saying I want an Intel Atom rig next to my TV. The size is good, but I'm not going to pay $400 for a PC that can just about queef out a Blu-Ray rip. I'm also not going to buy one of these AS WELL AS a gaming PC for my TV. How many PC's can one person have!?
What I'm saying is that if I'm buying a PC specifically to be connected to my TV, it had better 1) be able to play games [max out emulators and play PC games at low-mid] 2) be vewy vewy qwiet 3) be small so it fits in my entertainment center, in addition to looking like it belongs there and 4) be able to have low power consumption so I can watch movies and host files with it as well, because I'm not going to buy a home server + a living room gaming machine.
Is this making any sense at all? Do you understand the point I'm trying to get across here?


those 2 requirement won't be possible before at least 10 years using normal hardware, an i5 cpu gets the 85W alone, beside you probably won't be able to run dolphin from steam os anyway.I would like it to be able to run Dolphin at 1080p, be a file server (and maybe a Minecraft server) I also don't want it to pull any more than... let's say 80W from the wall

those 2 requirement won't be possible before at least 10 years using normal hardware, an i5 cpu gets the 85W alone, beside you probably won't be able to run dolphin from steam os anyway.

yeah but steam os doesn't let you run softwares other than the steam client itself + some linux compatible games purchased on steam. It currently doesn't let you stream pictures, video or music either.Yeah, just a note, Dolphin has Linux builds. So you would be able to run it, since SteamOS is a Debian derivative.

yeah but steam os doesn't let you run softwares other than the steam client itself + some linux compatible games purchased on steam. It currently doesn't let you stream pictures, video or music either.
As it is right now, the steam box is an extremely expensive HDMI cable and wireless controller, except you don't need to pass a hdmi cable through the wall, although if you want the best experience, you'll need to pass a rj-45 cable through the wall anyway (unless you have a powerline network).
The worst part being that aside from being more expensive than current (next) gen consoles (with few exceptions), it has less features than previous gen console.
Q: How do I get to the desktop on SteamOS? All I see is Steam.
To access the SteamOS desktop, it must be enabled from the Steam Settings menu. Select Settings (the gear icon in the top right) then select Interface and check the "Enable access to the Linux desktop" box. Now the Exit button will have an additional option, "Return to Desktop" that will switch to the SteamOS desktop.
From the desktop, click on the "Return to Steam" icon to switch back to Steam.

This is something I did notice about the cheaper Steam Machines. The ones that are near $500 are generally good deals specs-wise, and from that point upwards it's becoming more and more of a rip-off as the big name brands roll in. There's a couple Steam Machines that are genuienly good purchases, like the IBuyPower or the Cyberpower you mentioned. Most are meh, but a couple are actually good configs for the price.Like the $500 Cyberpower Steam Machine, it has either an AMD/Intel i5, an AMD Radeon R9 270/GTX 760, 8GB of RAM and 500GB of storage. For $500, that would be an excellent and cheap gaming PC. If I decided to go to Newegg and just throw those parts together, it would cost >$600-$700 depending on what I put in it.

This is something I did notice about the cheaper Steam Machines. The ones that are near $500 are generally good deals specs-wise, and from that point upwards it's becoming more and more of a rip-off as the big name brands roll in. There's a couple Steam Machines that are genuienly good purchases, like the IBuyPower or the Cyberpower you mentioned. Most are meh, but a couple are actually good configs for the price.



Good find, but I'll still argue that for the general, non tech savvy, couch/living room user, that's kinda counter intuitive and that it goes against the "keyboard-less living room pc gaming experience" vision the steambox is supposed to be.SteamOS uses GNOME for a desktop environment, and you can access it no problems.
[...] Steam FAQ quote [...]
SteamBoxes have actual PC hardware in them, a majority of them having high-spec'd hardware (which explains the price), and some have medium-high specs. Like the $500 Cyberpower Steam Machine, it has either an AMD/Intel i5, an AMD Radeon R9 270/GTX 760, 8GB of RAM and 500GB of storage. For $500, that would be an excellent and cheap gaming PC. If I decided to go to Newegg and just throw those parts together, it would cost >$600-$700 depending on what I put in it.

The thing is, I fear it might cause some misinformation, people might see those computer and think that's all they need to get themselves gaming and blindly throwing themselves into the huge steam library, only to find out that they need another computer to play most of the titles listed there.


