RataNova 1 day ago

I wish more hardware companies treated these kinds of optional add-ons as something the community can run with instead of either productizing them badly or locking them away completely...

  • jagged-chisel 1 day ago

    If we can’t extract all the value, no one can.

    • halJordan 20 hours ago

      But unironically lol. Eventually there will be a snap back. But probably not our generation

      • daveguy 18 hours ago

        I think that depends on what generation you're in. Because that generation is definitely here now and pissed off at the manipulative enshittification.

  • iwontberude 23 hours ago

    The goons that run public company boards would never allow for such gratuity.

  • oliver66677 23 hours ago

    they don't expect steam machine to sell so they don't care..

    • Rohansi 22 hours ago

      They did when it was announced. And it still will, just not as much as they would have wanted to.

    • ZiiS 20 hours ago

      Whilst the price is disappointing ; it is also sold-out.

dgellow 1 day ago

In case you're wondering and don't want to click around, the display is a standard Adafruit 5.83'' eInk panel: https://www.adafruit.com/product/6397

  • whatisthiseven 1 day ago

    Anyone know what the refresh rate for these displays are, at least with the stock firmware? Reading the datasheets didn't help, though maybe I didn't know what to look for.

    • gunalx 1 day ago

      Probable seconds per frame at least.

    • claudex 1 day ago

      The datasheet says 4 seconds for the image update time. However, I didn't found the time for partial refresh.

    • Rebelgecko 1 day ago

      Partial refresh on these can often be surprisingly fast, even when full refresh takes seconds

    • mrheosuper 1 day ago

      The refresh rate of eink is kind of...muddy. It depends on temperature and target contrast. With the right waveform and voltage, you can push it pretty far(like 30hz+).

      The thing is, Eink's waveform is kind of secret afaik, everyone has different tuning.

      • fc417fc802 1 day ago

        As I understand it going faster typically skips steps that are necessary for maintenance of the panel. Fine for a while but if you don't periodically run a "proper" cycle the panel could eventually be permanently damaged.

        • birdsongs 1 day ago

          That's exactly it. I was a firmware engineer at reMarkable making the latest tablets.

          We had some secret eink sauce (propriety waveforms) to get the high refresh rates and colour contrast without a full flashing screen reset, but even then you need to run longer maintenance refreshes occasionally.

          Pixels are just vertical columns of viscous fluid with charged ink particles. A waveform is just voltage changes over time to these columns to shift the particles up and down. More black to the top = darker shade of grey. Colour (in the gallery display, at least) is the same, just with each CMY particle group having different charges and responses to different waveforms.

          Every once in awhile this vertical column gets messy with loose particles distributed through it (ghosting, muddy contrast) so performing a hard rail-to-rail voltage reset forces all the particles up and then down, and gives you a clean slate.

          • 20k 1 day ago

            Out of interest, what (vaguely) is the amount of time you need between maintenance refreshes?

            • birdsongs 1 day ago

              It really depends on the state of the screen. It's easier with reading PDFs, for instance, when you can get away with a full refresh on page turns.

              Versus someone drawing on the screen with a lot of zooming and panning. People with the tablet would notice that when they stop a series of these actions that were back to back, the screen will "clean" itself after about 5 seconds of idleness.

          • mrheosuper 21 hours ago

            Interesting. Thanks for sharing.

            I have a question, hope it's not too sensitive, how do you guy protect your secret waveform ? One with enough tool and determination can just measure voltage at pixel and reverse the whole thing, the chinese can do that in less than a week i bet.

            • fc417fc802 21 hours ago

              I always wondered about this as well. Linux regularly gains reverse engineered drivers and it seems like the same would apply. I guess this is probably how the hobbyist projects that drive the panels faster came about? I assume it's the same as the NDAs surrounding SoCs where the entire exercise seemingly only exists to spite the general public while serving no practical purpose. (Well I suppose pandering to nontechnical management's insecurities is a sort of practical purpose but anyway.)

              But I was too lazy and/or uninterested to attempt low level tinkering with e-paper myself and these days you can finally purchase some reasonably(ish) fast panels off the shelf.

              • mrheosuper 20 hours ago

                1 approach i can think of is having the waveform flashed in factory. On supported controller, you can reflash the stock Waveform with yours.

                But still, that does not prevent one from measuring the voltage directly at pixel.

        • gamblor956 22 hours ago

          It's not that those steps are necessary to prevent damage, it's that those steps were traditionally necessary to maintain calibration of the individual cell states. Also...the first several generations used really slow graphics processors based on the premise that use cases didn't require fast refreshing.

          eInk mostly fixed the calibration issue years ago before the first eink monitors came out, and most eink products these days use beefier graphics processors.

          • fc417fc802 21 hours ago

            > It's not that those steps are necessary to prevent damage,

            It is my understanding (but I'm not even remotely an expert) that e-paper panels can suffer from permanent display burn due to the charged ink particles sticking to the glass. The stock waveforms take this into account and prevent it from happening. However I'm not entirely clear on the low level details or if this only applies to some subset of panels or etc.

        • mrheosuper 21 hours ago

          Yeah, those panels are quite delicate, so they need a "maintainence" waveform(full refresh/flashing) for every now and then, to wiggle those stuck droplets.

          Also when pushing for high refresh rate, you may need to use higher voltage, to make the droplets rise/fall faster. But sometime, those droplets are driven too hard and kind of stuck forever, so yeah, that's a trade off.

        • ErroneousBosh 20 hours ago

          > Fine for a while but if you don't periodically run a "proper" cycle the panel could eventually be permanently damaged.

          Sounds like a battery, or maybe even a dishwasher.

  • darksim905 1 day ago

    so probably waveshare or some other ODM? got it.

  • Lord_Zero 23 hours ago

    The real magic is the esp32, it talks to the steam box with Bluetooth. A Linux app sends metrics to the esp32 and it refreshes the display.

    • preisschild 22 hours ago

      Why would you use esp32/bluetooth though and not just SPI/i2c directly?

      • patja 17 hours ago

        It seems like one of the design goals was separation/independence. It also doesn't need a battery if it is meant to be tightly coupled with the Steam Machine. Which is nice for opening it up to many alternate uses.

  • AceJohnny2 23 hours ago

    I wonder how they achieve the lighting effect from the banner picture? It doesn't look like the Adafruit panel has backlighting built-in, and there isn't anything added in the project.

    • ZiiS 20 hours ago

      They are very reflective; a light from near the camera could look like that, but could be seen as a misleading choice.

    • petee 19 hours ago

      I see some kind of illumination from below/behind the display. Being from Gamers Nexus, I'd be shocked if it was manipulated. Maybe just a really steep sidelite

anticorporate 1 day ago

I'd love to see an easy guide to doing this with the Framework Desktop form factor. I didn't buy any of the silly little squares for the front of mine since I figured I could 3D print some later, but six months in still haven't gotten around to it.

  • phren0logy 1 day ago

    Same, but the front is important for airflow in the Framework Desktop, so I don't think covering it with an e-ink screen would work. But maybe with some space between the screen and the fan intake?

    • anticorporate 23 hours ago

      Yeah, it might need some kind of a riser to prevent airflow restriction. Of course, I suppose it depends on how many squares you cover.

      The other idea I keep noodling about is creating modular gears and perhaps using a servo for a really cool dial indicator instead, but alas, it hasn't made it further than my ideas bin.

  • RataNova 1 day ago

    A little e-ink status tile for temps, build status, now playing, or just a static label would be much more interesting than most decorative inserts

foax 1 day ago

This is so cool! Coincidentally, I'm currently building something in a similar vein that pushes system metrics out to an Android app so an old phone or tablet can be used as a case screen. The app has widget plugins that expose a repo of metrics received and a GL surface, that can then be used to display fancy visualisations.

Check it out here: https://github.com/xfoa/humours. It's not finished yet, but the basic functionality works. It just has one widget at the moment that draws a spinning cube with temps, etc.

  • RataNova 1 day ago

    The main thing I'd worry about is long-term reliability

ismaVQ 1 day ago

Hold on , i gotta recharge my front plate

tra3 1 day ago

I would love to see an analysis of how valve's openness and goodwill affects their bottom line. Intuitively it should be a net positive for them, but there gotta be upfront costs, otherwise everyone would be doing it too.

  • dismalaf 1 day ago

    Valve is one of the most efficient (revenue/staff) corporations there is. Far more so than most tech companies even. If that's how you measure goodwill then it seems like it works.

    • flaunf221 22 hours ago

      > Valve is one of the most efficient (revenue/staff) corporations there is

      Efficiency is not a word I would use when speaking about rent-seeking. Landlord that 20 years ago bought some land that later became valuable and who is today renting it out is infinitely efficient as they are doing jack. And amount of respect they get is about equal to their economic output.

      • dismalaf 22 hours ago

        True but in the physical world a landlord has a monopoly over the parcel of land. Valve has a ton of competitors that seemingly get no traction and Steam is beloved.

        • flaunf221 22 hours ago

          No landlord owns entire planet. You never need to agree. If you want to open your store (=sell your game) you can always just rent or buy some other place that this landlord doesn't own. Like for example 150 kilometres away from here where you may get 2 visitors per day, sometimes there will even be humans.

          Same with Steam. You are absolutely free to sell your game not on Steam. Except that unless you're a super massive giant selling highly anticipated game you might get no sales. But the choice to eat or starve is always up to you.

  • moffkalast 1 day ago

    They have an infinite money glitch in Steam, it hardly matters for them even if it makes a loss as long as it propagates the ecosystem.

  • 3eb7988a1663 1 day ago

    They have a money printer that gives them nearly unlimited flexibility. Being a private company means Gabe can do long-term investments without concern.

    Steam has been an incredibly good steward of its position, but I fear for the day when capitalism finally sinks its claws into the platform.

    • kQq9oHeAz6wLLS 1 day ago

      Capitalism doesn't break things, it builds them. You're thinking of greed, which exists in all economic types.

      • Root_Denied 1 day ago

        Unregulated capitalism breaks things for sure. That regulation can stem from government intervention or private ownership (or both).

        Regulation can also break things if done incorrectly/poorly/inefficiently/corruptly.

    • dismalaf 1 day ago

      > capitalism finally sinks its claws

      Capitalism has nothing to do with short term greed.

      Some CEOs are just too arrogant and think that optimizing for the short term won't hurt goodwill. That's their own failure. Capitalism says nothing about how a business should be run. It's merely defining the idea that humans who own things (capital) allocate their resources and keep the result.

      • jdiff 18 hours ago

        I think they know it'll hurt goodwill. I think they don't think they have to care what other people think about them. I think they think they're too big to fail.

  • BunsanSpace 1 day ago

    1. Valve is a private company with a money printer (steam) 2. the point of these initiatives is to build an ecosystem with steam at the centre.

    A better way to look at this is valve is trying to hedge it's self against microsoft. By creating an ecosystem of devices and software that's full open so they're not reliant on Microsoft. The goal of Valve hardware ISN'T to make money. It's to encourage others to build devices free of Microsoft that Steam can be installed on.

    They have nothing to gain by being closed, and everything to gain by being open.

rldjbpin 8 hours ago

the part selection is appropriate for the current steam machine pricing, but i wonder if having this resource can help someone salvage eink displays from old kindles to achieve the same result.

orbital-decay 1 day ago

Is it even useful as a faceplate? An active display would be way more accurate at displaying hardware stats when the machine loses power (it'll shut down).

  • cubefox 1 day ago

    That's an interesting case of a display being off actually indicating something ("loss of power") which can't be replicated with a bistable screen.

    On the other hand, you probably don't want that glow of an active screen all the time. Status LEDs are annoying enough.

    • jdiff 1 day ago

      This screen is entirely independent, with its own power source, so unlike most bistable screens this one could also report when its connection with the Machine is lost, and in a different way than simply turning off.

      • cubefox 1 day ago

        It's own power source... Let me guess, solar cells? Batteries? A separate power plug?

        • jdiff 1 day ago

          Just a lithium battery.

          • cubefox 1 day ago

            Now I wonder how it gets recharged.

            • jdiff 22 hours ago

              Feather has a charging circuit on board, and its usb port has a channel carved out for it and is close to the edge

    • toast0 1 day ago

      > That's an interesting case of a display being off actually indicating something ("loss of power") which can't be replicated with a bistable screen.

      My kindles usually show a dead battery graphic when I get back to them after a long time away... With enough power storage and the right trigger, this could be done.

      • cubefox 21 hours ago

        Yeah with a battery you can change the screen to "dead battery" when the battery is almost dead.

rbanffy 1 day ago

Is the Steam Machine a decently priced desktop compared to the "generic" ones?

  • artisinal 1 day ago

    For a small gaming box it is a good price.

    If you don’t care that much about size, HDMI-CEC or SteamOS there are faster alternatives for the price.

    • voidUpdate 1 day ago

      Especially since, afaik, you plug it in and it just works. No messing around with installing operating systems, setting up users (aside from signing into steam) or anything. It's essentially a console that plays PC games, but it's also a PC for the purposes of upgradability and ability to do other, non-console stuff with it

      • weberer 1 day ago

        >No messing around with installing operating systems

        This is the real killer feature. So many people that I talk to know they want Linux, but are deathly afraid of installing it themselves.

    • hamdingers 1 day ago

      If you do care about SteamOS, any machine with a reasonably recent AMD GPU will run SteamOS or a similar distro just fine.

  • oAlbe 1 day ago

    Gamers Nexus did a very in depth review of the Steam Machine [1], which includes a comparison to a build yourself similar machine.

    The result is that for about 70 dollars less you can put together a somewhat more powerful PC than the Steam Machine, but not for that form factor, it would still be bigger.

    IMO, the Steam Machine is not a bad purchase if you are in the market for that type of product.

    [1] https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=66QzlDewigE

  • delecti 1 day ago

    You can't build a machine which is as powerful, small, quiet, and cheap, nor can you take for granted that a machine you build can have a controller that can wake it from sleep, or which has HDMI-CEC (both are possible, but take extra work or hardware). You can rather easily build a machine with multiple of those attributes, but you'll have to pick ones to sacrifice in the name of the others.

    • tl 1 day ago

      I like the SteamDeck I have, but it doesn't do HDMI-CEC or controller wake from sleep today. Valve needs to prove the Steam Machine doesn't fail here.

      • delecti 1 day ago

        The Steam Deck itself doesn't have an HDMI port, but the official dock does, and that does support HDMI-CEC (support was added to SteamOS a couple years ago). The Steam Deck also does support controller wake from sleep (added in the past year or so); I've actually seen people complaining about their Steam Decks waking up when they didn't realize that feature existed.

        And all of the reviews I've seen about the Steam Machine talk about how well both of those features work.

        • tl 1 day ago

          It does not. Source: have a dock. Latest firmware installed from deck. And because the current Steam controller is a recent release, I had to try a whole mess of third party controllers before settling on PS5 controllers because everything else I tried had Bluetooth pairing issues / disconnects as you approached four controllers.

          SteamDeck as a handheld is great plus or minus a few nits baked onto the power / battery life choices Valve made. SteamDeck -> TV and SteamDeck -> USB-C KVM are both workable, with caveats. I had hoped we would see the bug fixes you describe before the Steam Machine release. Alas, no.

          • esseph 1 day ago

            You are confidently incorrect.

            SteamDeck supports HDMI-CEC as of 3.7 ~2 years ago, using the original dock or select third party docks.

            ---

            How to Enable CEC:

            Press the STEAM button and go to Settings.

            Navigate to the Display tab.

            On the right side of the screen, find and toggle on Enable HDMI CEC Support.

            Ensure Wake TV when device resumes from sleep is also enabled.

          • delecti 1 day ago

            CEC support was added in to the Dock in May 2024 https://store.steampowered.com/news/app/1675200?emclan=10358...

            Bluetooth wake made available for LCD Decks in September 2025 (it was already available in OLED models) https://store.steampowered.com/news/app/1675200/view/4983336...

            I will say that the Deck has less than stellar bluetooth reception in my experience too. I settled on an 8bitdo controller because my XBox Elite couldn't stay connected from across the room. The Steam Machine has a dedicated antenna for Steam Controllers though.

            • esseph 20 hours ago

              It's a Bluetooth problem in general.

              If you have 2 or more controllers, you're often better off going with wifi dongles.

          • thecommakozzi 22 hours ago

            Read the other replies, and i’ll restate that you are indeed confidently incorrect: i have been using this feature since the update that added it. i use the steam controller and i am using the original valve dock.

    • esseph 1 day ago

      The only thing you might lose by building your own and running SteamOS is HDMI-CEC.

      The steam controller would work just fine.

      Valve supports SteamOS on other hardware.

    • rbanffy 5 hours ago

      I was thinking of getting prebuilt machines from the usual suspects, Dell, HP, Lenovo, ASUs, and so on.

      • delecti 3 hours ago

        Those will be cheaper and/or more powerful. If that's all you care about, then the Steam Machine probably isn't worth the price or wait.

        But they'll also be bigger, louder, probably not support HDMI-CEC, may or may not support waking via bluetooth, and it's a gamble whether they'll support Linux as well. Both are totally valid options, it just comes down to which tradeoffs you prefer.

        • rbanffy 1 hour ago

          The "boring" business boxes from the usual suspects are usually well supported by Linux, even if HDMI-CEC and BBT wake might not be priorities for the manufacturers. The hardware is so unimaginative it's almost an Intel or AMD reference design.

  • weberer 1 day ago

    Compared to buying from parts? No.

    Compared to an average prebuilt? You can probably find large tower PCs at a lower price, but they'll likely have a low quality motherboard or power supply.

    Compared to an average prebuilt that ships with Linux? Absolutely

    • rbanffy 6 hours ago

      I was thinking about the usual Dell and Lenovo boxes.

neves 22 hours ago

Whyv does a game console need a slow e-ink display?

  • doawoo 22 hours ago

    It's not for gaming, it's for making the faceplate digitally customizable. I love it!

  • preisschild 22 hours ago

    Status Monitor

    I remember a few years ago when many custom PC cases had 5.25"-bay displays to control their fans / show temperatures. Some rackmount server appliances also make use of them

julionc 21 hours ago

Valve mi familia

deadbabe 1 day ago

e-ink is becoming the new hotness lately. There may soon be a time when you will look at every poster or menu on a wall and wonder if it is paper or an actual e-ink screen that will soon change to some other image. Airports, highway signs, etc.

  • iso1631 1 day ago

    And of course it will be used for advertising, creating massive externalities for barely any income for the land owner, but they won't care because its others that pay

shomp 1 day ago

Care to fix this ungrammatical headline? :)

  • gilrain 1 day ago

    It’s a cultural difference you’re unaware of, not an error.

  • toast0 1 day ago

    I think this site is from the UK where companies are plural (they are made of people after all). Is there some other grammatical issue you have... it is kind of meandering, but that's taste more than grammar.

    What would you suggest instead?

    • shomp 7 hours ago

      To me it reads like a demand: "Valve, open source the Steam Machine e-ink screen"

      If we are talking past tense, "Valve have open-sourced.."

      And if we are talking American "English," then "Valve has open-sourced..."

  • dang 23 hours ago

    It's grammatical. I put a hyphen in 'open-source' in case that helps.

    • shomp 7 hours ago

      That does help but on the 4th of July I would prefer the American ;)

Fokamul 1 day ago

Clickbait, I want to make an actual eInk display myself. Not just buy one from Adafruit.

ray_v 1 day ago

It would have justified the price had they included this in the base model - this is the next best thing I suppose. Valve is really coming out as the good guy here in the video game industry and we should really support and applaud all that they're doing to hold the line for consumers and fans.

  • stavros 1 day ago

    Yes but saying "it would have justified the price if they had included extra expensive things" is the same as saying "it should be cheaper". Sure, but stuff costs.

  • voidUpdate 1 day ago

    Given computer part prices recently because of new datacenters, I think the price is already justified, as they don't want to sell it at a loss

romaniv 1 day ago

"Valve will not be making and providing their own e-ink display for the Steam Machine"

Too bad. The picture in the articles looks awesome. Like a device from some alternate reality. Neither retro nor the standard flat-panel LCD.

I don't want to mod a pre-build $1,049 device. I want it to be good our of the box and I'd rather pay more to get more. (If it was a $3K top-of-midrange machine, I would buy it in a second.)

  • jdiff 1 day ago

    You're not modding a pre-built $1049 device. The faceplates are removable and swappable with no disassembly needed, and this fancy one connects via bluetooth and is powered via a battery. Entirely non-invasive.