Rant: Valve's new Steam Deck screws speak volumes about their ethos.

In case you’re out of the loop, the old Steam Deck had Philips screws that screwed into self-tapping plastic holes. This lead to occasional stripped threads and often stripped screwheads.

Valve absolutely did not have to change their screws, and its probably actually against their best interests. While other companies around the world are constantly in search of new ways to screw their own consumers, Valve goes out of their way to update their screws to make them easier to install/remove by changing to torx screws and added metal threads in the backplate. Those who know anything about mechanical engineering know this is not an insignificant amount of effort they put into it.

This is a small change that makes a huge impact, and speaks volumes about the ethos of the company. It says:

  1. We want to make our devices last longer, and be easier to repair.
  2. If you want to buy the cheaper tier and save yourself a few bucks by installing whatever SSD you want, go right ahead.
  3. We trust you to make decisions for yourself.
  4. Most importantly, we respect you, the consumer, and want you to fully own and control the devices we sell.

Valve is by no means perfect, and there’s plenty more they could be doing, but they’ve earned my respect and my patronage and I won’t buy games from anywhere else. I will buy whatever future products they sell, even if I don’t think I’ll use them regularly.

navi,
@navi@lemmy.tespia.org avatar

Less of a rant, more of a rave.

Cool upgrade for hobbiests.

Redhotkurt,
Redhotkurt avatar
key,

Ya from the title I expected OP to be complaining because they don’t own a torx head screwdriver/bit.

WalrusDragonOnABike,

Was expecting the same and I didn't even know they switched to torx. Philips screws are bad. I go out of my way and spend extra money to avoid them.

helenslunch,

Whoops. Unintentional clickbait.

Exec,
@Exec@pawb.social avatar

Me, as one who only read the first line before scrolling to the comments, good thing that others pointed out about the topic itself

helenslunch,

Are rants inherently negative?

theangriestbird,

rant /rănt/ intransitive verb

  1. To speak or write in an angry or emotionally charged manner; rave.
  2. To express at length a complaint or negative opinion.
helenslunch,

My b

Tlaloc_Temporal,

Nah, definition 1 right there isn’t inherently negative. It’s certainly more involved than otherwise necessary and seems somewhat driven by emotion, so while it skips the negative connotation I think this counts plenty well.

helenslunch,

I think of a rant more as a long-winded statement that most people would agree with. Sort of a “off my chest” kinda thing.

Perfide,

By definition, no, but most people probably assume negativity when they hear the word rant.

guyrocket,
guyrocket avatar

Made by hardware hackers for hardware hackers.

Honytawk,

Strange how a company with infinite money just produces stuff they like huh?

Every company should try that.

wolf,

Look at the shit Apple produces and understand it is not only a function of money.

kksgandhi,

Steam is an infinite money generator, yes, but any publicly owned company would have fucked it up for short term profits. Valve absolutely has its problems, but its focus on the long term and respecting its customers means it can make infinite money and do stuff like this.

ascagnel,

Three thoughts:

  • Valve doesn’t use physical media, so there isn’t a need to enforce DRM at the hardware level
  • the Deck itself is sold at a small profit regardless of the configuration, so there’s no benefit to pushing users to higher-price configurations
  • Valve enforces its DRM in software via the OS

The biggest reasons to lock down hardware aren’t really there on the Deck. On top of that, it benefits Valve to have other devices running their storefront, so using off-the-shelf parts when possible makes it easier for others to use the Deck as a template.

helenslunch, (edited )

I really have no idea what this comment is supposed to be about. Do you think companies like Apple don’t make buckets of money from their app store? Or their subscription services? Do you think they “need” to charge exorbitant prices for their hardware? Do you think they “need” to strike partnerships with their suppliers to ensure they can’t sell their parts to anyone else? Do you think they “need” to lock them down so that even if you’re able to obtain third party parts, they still won’t work?

Corporations don’t care about “needs”. Their goals are to extract as much money from the consumer as humanly possible.

jarfil,

Apple’s business model is to sell hardware, in order to “extract as much money from the consumer as humanly possible” they “need” to protect hardware sales first and foremost.

Valve’s business model is to sell software, in order to “extract […] possible” they “need” to have as much compatible hardware as possible.

You can argue that Apple’s business model is antiquated or suboptimal, but you’ll have to prove that freeing their hardware and reducing prices, would mean an equal or higher increase in benefits from their app store and subscriptions.

helenslunch,

Apple’s business model is to sell hardware

That is incorrect. Apple sells a wide variety of software and subscription services, including ALL apps in the App Store, with a whopping 30% share of any app purchase or in-app purchases, much like Steam.

Valve’s business model is to sell software

Valve could just as easily decide they want to profit from the hardware, just like Apple. Especially now that they’ve sold several million of them. They choose not to.

You can argue that Apple’s business model is antiquated or suboptimal

It is absolutely neither of those things. They have a brilliant business model. So much so that they’re able to sucker people into paying 100%+ more than any of their products are actually worth while simultaneously pissing in their faces and telling them it’s raining by building in a locked ecosystem, disallowing the users to decide what software they want to use, and making their hardware almost completely irreparable.

CrowAirbrush,

Turns out i’m gonna buy a steamdeck with them using linux and thinking of things like this.

I just need to wait a bit as the most expensive season is around the corner, i’m just glad our Dutch black friday doesn’t outdo any regular discount making it a near necessity to wait for black friday.

Mugmoor,
@Mugmoor@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Why Robertson heads are only popular in Canada I’ll never understand.

Y’all missing out.

egerlach,

I mean, you got my upvote already, but one big reason is that Robertson wanted to control all the manufacturing of the screws and the bits. Phillips licensed his patent out and let anyone make them just taking a tiny licensing fee. Made a fortune on volume. Robertson: good engineer, bad businessman.

Nacktmull, (edited )

Because hexagonal screw drives are superior, they can transfer more torque and last longer. What I don´t get is why slotted, cruciform and square screw drives are even still around when there are much more reliable alternatives to choose from, like Hex and Torx for example.

Swarfega,

Canadians are saying ‘Y’all’ now?

azdalen,

deleted_by_author

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  • Ashe,

    Alberta has entered the chat

    t0fr,
    @t0fr@lemmy.ca avatar

    Torx screws and threaded inserts is not really that much effort engineering side.

    It has more significant impact on the cost. Millions of torx screws and threaded inserts cost more than self tapping Phillips into plastic.

    stolid_agnostic,

    Are people continually opening their steam decks? I am confused at the opportunity to have stripped screws and dethreaded holes.

    erwan,

    You just need to open it once to strip a screw

    helenslunch,

    Some people are, yes. For modifications, mostly.

    stolid_agnostic,

    I can understand wanting mods, but at the same time, it’s not like you can open your iPhone without damaging it in the process. I guess I want to say that I can get why people would want to add stuff to their thing, but I don’t see why someone would expect Valve to have accounted for that.

    Kedly,

    Thats OP’s point? Valve has gone above and beyond what’d be reasonable to expect?

    helenslunch,

    When I get my new OLED the first thing I will do is crack it open and swap the SSDs. Partly because the other one has all my data on it and it be an eternity to move it over and partly because the old one has already been swapped for a 1TB.

    Crozekiel,

    You’re missing the point of this post… They specifically made a change to make it easier to open and put back together without damage, which is not the norm in most related industries these days. That’s a good thing that we have been conditioned not to expect because of companies like Apple that fully do not want you to open your device ever for any reason.

    Your comment sounds like “well you can’t open an iPhone without damaging it, why should you be able to open a steam deck without damaging it”… Very much corporate overlord shill vibes.

    stolid_agnostic,

    “Corporate shrill”. Why was it necessary to make it personal?

    My point is that you can’t expect companies to do good things. Valve seems to be an exception.

    Also you have to admit that the title frames it like a complaint. Top post points this out

    nieceandtows,

    Yeah I haven’t even made an account on Epic to get free games from there. Valve almost single handedly made Linux a viable gaming platform and I’m grateful for that (I know wine has existed far longer than proton, but the difference before and after proton is day and night).

    soulsource,
    @soulsource@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    Even before Proton Valve was heavily invested in Linux gaming.

    SteamOS has been around way longer than Proton, and the Steam Client had a native Linux version for such a long time, I don’t even remember when it was published. Also, the Steam Linux Runtime is something worth mentioning - it is a common base that game developers can target instead of the various different distributions.

    Colorcodedresistor, (edited )

    As someone who used to run a louis rossman electronics repair business for a couple years before i burned out.

    LG G5 was and still is my point to for perfectly fixable devices.

    Motorola is trash because you have to dismantle the phone from the back layer by layer just to reach the front screen.

    HTC was even worse with two tier motherboards and octopuss ribbon cables were a nightmare to navigate.

    iPhone was/ is possibly the easiest fucking phone to fix, ironically…however by the iphone 8 and onwards apple found increasingly shitty ways to make 3rd party repairs nearly impossible.

    windows phones, nokia, and others were hit or miss. tablets were long winded affairs but generally easy due to their inherent size.

    ive been out of the game since 2019 when covid dropped. id really like to hear the inside baseball on any current operators running repair business.

    i used Repair Shopr software to manage my customers. idk if thats still the go to or if another has bested it.

    TheGalacticVoid,

    Any opinions on Samsung or Google?

    bjoern_tantau,
    @bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de avatar

    When I couldn’t repair my Nokia and replace the 5 € USB-Port because there happened to be a small crack in the screen (of course you have to remove the glued on screen to accese the innards), I caved and bought a Fairphone 3.

    Worst decision ever. The stupid thing refuses to break to let me even use the better repairability.

    domi,
    @domi@lemmy.secnd.me avatar

    Good to hear, got a Fairpone 5 recently and I’m very happy with it so far.

    Although breaking it probably won’t take more than a year for clumsy me.

    vaalla,

    I manage to break 2 usb conectors in 1 year.

    bjoern_tantau,
    @bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de avatar

    Honestly, I think I’ve never dropped a phone as much as this one. And apart from a few scratches there’s nothing. I think it’s the battery cover that usually just pops off like on the indestructible Nokia phones of decades past.

    Really funny how I can use Nokia as both a positive and a negative example.

    jarfil,

    I think it’s the battery cover that usually just pops off like on the indestructible Nokia phones of decades past.

    “Battery cover”, or… “kinetic energy redirector” 😉

    AdamHenry,

    Just in case you were wondering, Motorola is still trash. I bought the G5 and I absolutely hate it.

    TWeaK,

    While other companies around the world are constantly in search of new ways to screw their own consumers

    You bastard, take that upvote.

    ComradeKhoumrag,
    @ComradeKhoumrag@infosec.pub avatar

    I read the title with that connotation. Was actually looking forward to hearing a valid complaint of the steam deck but Surprise!

    lukas,

    I can already hear my business administration professor scream that everyone in the free market tries to screw each other from that statement lol. Why yes of course, money. Planned obsolescence is the only logical choice, people! I bet nobody will source old, but durable products and repair them instead, no no. That’ll never happen!

    PeWu,

    I think Valve in on very early steps of enshittification. Maybe not everyone, but most companies started like that. I mean being nice to users. Counterargument to my claim is that they are already millionaires, which is true, but humans’ greed may be limitless.

    helenslunch,

    Valve is not a new company and they’re easily worth billions.

    PeWu,

    Okay, I may have misplaced few zeros here ant there, my apologies.

    SaltySalamander,
    SaltySalamander avatar

    Gabe himself is worth over 4 billion.

    Omega_Jimes,

    Always be on guard and claim no allegiance to any huge company.

    Also, Valve have been pretty consumer friendly for 20 years.

    araozu,

    I fear when lord gaben dies volvo will go public and enshittification will begin

    frezik,

    Looks at copier sheet that’s not a Vol-vo.

    Byter,

    Fortunately Gaben has only a minor interest in Volvo 😉.

    But actually his son is involved in the games industry, and there’s plenty of other like-minded people at Valve. Hopefully the (far) future of Valve is as bright as its present.

    AndrasKrigare,

    I think a reason that Valve has been able to be consumer friendly for so long is that they aren’t public and not beholden to shareholders.

    tastysnacks,

    That’s interesting. Are there other large non public gaming companies? I actually want to ask this outside of gaming, but don’t want to stray outside the community.

    fox_the_apprentice,

    Epic Games*, Mihoyo**, IO Interactive, Bethesda/ZeniMax***, Deep Silver.

    • Epic games is 40% owned by a publicly-traded company, Tencent.

    ** Mihoyo filed for an IPO in 2017, but withdrew its application for unknown reasons.

    *** ZeniMax Media was recently acquired by Microsoft, and is now a Microsoft subsidiary. I’m not sure if this makes it count as a ‘non-public gaming company’ by your definition.

    blindbunny,

    This is the correct answer.

    When a company only has to please customers they are allowed to bend and in extreme cases break their own rules for a customer to be satisfied.

    When you have to please share holders and customers. You as a laborer must decide to please the customer or the share holders. Sadly the longer you work somewhere the more like you are to please a customer if you work with them directly. The further you are from the customer the more likely you are to disagree with choosing customer satisfaction over shareholder satisfaction. Begin enshitirication.

    frezik,

    To be clear, that gives them the opportunity to avoid enshittification. There’s plenty of private companies that are dogshit. Valve happens to be one of them that took the opportunity and ran with it.

    When Gaben retires or dies, things could very easily change. But I don’t think it’ll happen before then.

    Zozano,

    I don’t think it will happen. Enshittification has a predictable life cycle. Valve has had years of opportunity to sell out, but haven’t.

    araozu,

    If valve were public, and required to make a lot more money than the previous quarter, they would absolutely need (want?) to get the maximum amount of money from wherever they could. It’s what I think it’s happening with netflix & others. It doesn’t matter that (hypotetically) they make a billion dolars of revenue. They need to make more next quarter. So they need to raise prices, forbid account sharing, reduce content quarity, anything to earn as much money as possible for next quarter.

    Volvo could earn a billion dollars, and if they don’t want to earn more, they could happily stay the same. They might even want to make moves thinking on the long term, such as keep customers happy and excited, or invest in new technologies like proton. Compared to netflix execs, who don’t care about the long term, they care about next quarter.

    I don’t know a lot about the stock market, but it looks stupid to me to bet on infinite growth. If the company earns money, and I own shares, shouldn’t I earn money via dividends? It looks to me like the only way to make money is to buy low and sell high? Or is that just greed?

    TheGalacticVoid,

    The fact that you said Volvo on accident brings me back to the old ThioJoe troll days

    jarfil, (edited )

    If the company earns money, and I own shares, shouldn’t I earn money via dividends?

    You do. Companies give dividends all the time (well, every x months, usually at least yearly).

    It looks to me like the only way to make money is to buy low and sell high? Or is that just greed?

    Just greed… mostly. A lot of people want to “get rich quick”, and a bunch of already rich people like to gamble to get even richer, so a lot of market volatility comes from greed… but a share price with good growth expectations can make it attractive enough that the company may decide to give lower dividends (no need to attract people), so if you can “buy low, sell high”, you may still want to do it regardless.

    You can still ride the market mostly on dividends by diversifying and investing into multiple companies whose share prices will average out in the long run (picking the right diversified portfolio, is an art on itself).

    need to make more next quarter

    That’s mostly an effect of tying C-suite compensations too closely to share prices, with no further checks in place. When the main driving force behind the decision makers is increasing share prices, they’ll happily burn down the whole company, cash out, and jump ship.

    Sometimes it’s done on purpose, when some long-time investors grow tired and decide to cash out, maybe because they expect a change in the market and the company becoming less competitive or even obsolete. If the expected changes are big enough, it’s easier to start a new company from scratch, than to restructure an old behemoth with thousands of people used to doing things “like they’ve always been done”.

    houseofkeb,

    Valve being a private company is probably the thing that allows them to focus on putting out good products w/o dealing with shareholders demanding more.

    And they make a ton of money doing right by their core consumer base, I would be very surprised if we see any of that change.

    If Valve were any other company they would have laid off half their staff and coasted on that 30% from Steam. They’re not perfect, but maybe the only company I feel good about giving money to, consistently.

    JokeDeity,

    When Gaben dies there will be fucking riots.

    Onihikage,
    @Onihikage@beehaw.org avatar

    I really hope he’s cultivating at least one successor within the company to carry on his vision.

    IWantToFuckSpez,

    Yeah what Valve is doing is great. Hopefully they will become more mainstream in the future and become more known with the super casual crowd. Nintendo definitely needs more proper competition in the handheld market.

    Also FYI it’s Phillips with double L, Philips with one L is the Dutch electronics company.

    helenslunch,

    Eh, they’re both shit 💩

    LoamImprovement,

    I can’t imagine what gives you that idea about the Steam Deck. I’ve had mine for a year and it’s a great little device.

    irmoz,

    I think they meant Philips and Phillips

    helenslunch,

    I was referring to Philips the company and Phillips the screw. I feel like I made my thoughts on the Steam Deck pretty clear.

    LoamImprovement,

    Lol whoops, did not see the OP next to your name. My bad.

    Mummelpuffin,
    @Mummelpuffin@beehaw.org avatar

    I mean… Phillips heads are hood for what they’re actually designed for, which is, uh, to strip really easily so they don’t get over-tightened. Which is irrelevant if your manufacturing is precise enough.

    Appoxo,
    @Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    Screw head not device.

    altima_neo,
    @altima_neo@lemmy.zip avatar

    Norelco ain’t bad tho

    PeWu,

    I actually thought they invented those screws, thus linking them to their company. Glad to be enlightened

    I_am_10_squirrels,

    If they do become more mainstream, there is more opportunities for enshitification.

    IWantToFuckSpez,

    Nah not as long as they don’t go public and Gaben runs the company

    averyminya,

    People ITT: it’s called ranting and raving!

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