would tabs similar to those in web browsers improve steam or make it unnecessarily taxing for low end PC's?
It sells soundtracks, but I'm not sure I would want movies on Steam.Elmoth said:Also, why doesn't steam sell movies/music?
And so it begins... In 20 years time we are like "Hey, remember when people actually used steam to buy games? Lol, anyway, I hope that fridge I bought on steam arrives soon!"DazZ. said:It sells soundtracks, but I'm not sure I would want movies on Steam.Elmoth said:Also, why doesn't steam sell movies/music?
I'd quite like it just being game oriented.
Are you sure?SmashLovesTitanQuest said:Believe it or not, Steam uses IE6. Laggy, slow piece of crap.
I mean, I understand them not paying money to use Chrome or whatever, but maybe update it to IE8 or something?
Thats in-game web browsers for you, if you think thats bad the Eve online browser was super slow back when I was a player a couple of years backSmashLovesTitanQuest said:According to some "totally legit" site I found over google, they updated to something called webkit in 2009.
Doesn't really change anything. Browsing the shop is still a laggy experience.
He's wrong of course. It uses Webkit. Back when it actually rendered in Trident it could do multiple tabs. And I want that back.Legendsmith said:Are you sure?SmashLovesTitanQuest said:Believe it or not, Steam uses IE6. Laggy, slow piece of crap.
I mean, I understand them not paying money to use Chrome or whatever, but maybe update it to IE8 or something?
I mean, I know it did at one point, but I thought it HAD been updated a while ago.