I'm definitely missing stuff because it's a PC too much to know the breadth of what applications exists. Try a window tiling manager desktop environment.
#Steam os emulator vbox install
You should be able install multiple and switch between. You can replace KDE with another desktop environment. You can install a VPN service on Linux easy. Don't know if you can run a VPN on an Xbox without putting the VPN on your router. OBS and others so record video, stream video. You can plug in an external HDD and use SeaFile or whatever's popular these days to host your own Dropbox type service on your own machine. Most emulators start off as Linux projects first. Looks like Cemu is Windows only, that's now the only one I know of like that. Every emulator I'm aware of - there's probably something Windows only. Run a Ventrilo, Mumble server or some other one. Chat applications: Discord, Telegram, Slack, Zoom, I think Teams. So all the applications that run in web browsers.
#Steam os emulator vbox android
Android development.Įvery popular desktop web browser plus more except Safari. All the popular editors, VS Code, Sublime etc. Java, C, C++, Kotlin, C#, Rust, Go, JavaScript/Node/etc, WASM, everything LLVM, whatever. Darktable is supposed to be a great RAW image manager and editor, supposed to be pretty competative with Adobe Lightroom, I wouldn't know I'm amateur with it.
GIMP supposed to specialize in photoediting. If not MS Office, Libreoffice/WPS Office/OnlyOffice.ĭigital painting with Krita and you can photo editing in there. Office, run Microsoft Office through Wine/Lutris, Proton is a customized Wine fork so you should be able to run Office through Proton. FFmpeg and all sorts of other media tools. Audio workstation with Ardour, Audacious/Audacity. Run a media server with like Plex or whatever is popular over Emby now (last I heard Emby is bad now?). 3D Modeling, sculpting, rigging, animations with software like Blender and Autodesk Maya. Video editing with like DaVinci Resolve, Kdenlive, Lightworks. Unity and Godot have official releases for Linux which you can install on Arch/SteamOS 3 and eventually that open source Lumberyard fork/rewrite.