How big is your Steam folder?

I've been baggering on at my dad to upgrade but considering i'm the only one who ever uses the damn internet for anything other than browsing, it would be quite stupid and selfish. So i shall put up with it for now :P Or least till i convince him that i'll pay the damn fee every month :P
If you're feeling a little sneaky, just set a P2P program to use up 90% of your bandwidth (up and down) so the net runs but slowly.. then when they start complaining that internet is slow, feed them some bull about how it's modern websites being more bandwidth heavy, and upgrading to 50meg will solve it. ;)
 
You using SCSI in your home PC?

74GB 10,000rpm Western Digital VelociRaptor = £64.99

73GB 15,000rpm Seagate Cheetah U320 = £25 from eBay as companies upgrade to sas

I had a spare PCI SCSI card and cable so thought why not, higher performance and lower cost = win, plus I wear a headset so don't hear it ^^

If I wanna upgrade I can get a 146gb drive for 37% of what a raptor 150 costs :P
 
i find most peoples steam folder size quite amusing considering the itunes like reception steam got when it was first introduced.
 
When steam was first introduced the bitching about steam was incredible. Moaning about how it needed an internet connection to work, it was slow, it was crap, it didn't work, friends was pointless, it was bloated blah blah blah....

And now everybody loves it and spends Hundreds of £ each year on games for it. Quite a marked turn around wouldn't you agree ? Steam is becoming the de facto standard for internet games delivery on the PC. Nobody has anything else nearly as developed / refined / polished as steam is. So much so that rather than develop their own systems, lots of developers just publish straight onto steam. Valve has carved a beautiful niche for themselves.
 
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113 games
 
When steam was first introduced the bitching about steam was incredible. Moaning about how it needed an internet connection to work, it was slow, it was crap, it didn't work, friends was pointless, it was bloated blah blah blah....

That's because when it debuted broadband wasn't so common, it was slow, it was crap, it didn't work, friends aren't everyone's cup of tea (I only have one, acquired less than a week ago, and only because I bought a 4pack off him...), and at the time it was pretty bloated to have to load up some additional app just to play a game released in 1998.

And now everybody loves it and spends Hundreds of £ each year on games for it. Quite a marked turn around wouldn't you agree ? Steam is becoming the de facto standard for internet games delivery on the PC. Nobody has anything else nearly as developed / refined / polished as steam is. So much so that rather than develop their own systems, lots of developers just publish straight onto steam. Valve has carved a beautiful niche for themselves.

That's because Steam is much better now :)
I agree Valve have been very shrewd however, using it as a delivery platform for other publishers has seen it become more than just a niche and crucially they have made use of sales, compilation packs and suchlike to get people using it more. Then it kind of reaches critical mass where people have so many games on Steam using it becomes second nature and they actively prefer buying games on steam than by any other method.

Believe it or not in a funny sort of way I think their combination of sale prices, catalogue of older titles and "allowing laziness" (no need to leave your house/wait for delivery, no need to put disk in the drive etc) has actually helped to combat piracy a little. People who are earning a decent living probably don't begrudge paying 26 quid for the THQ complete pack, they don't even need to get off their arse, they can just suck it down and never need for faff about finding the dvd etc. Just look at what has happened in the music industry, once digital distribution was embraced they actually realised hang on a minute, people are lapping this up, they aren't just into mp3 because it (was) free, they like the idea of online acquisition, slapping thousands of tracks on portable players, being able to get hold of rare stuff, relatively cheap prices etc etc.

Seriously I would love to see sales figures for the steam sales, I reckon publishers worried about piracy could make a killing selling games on the cheap (depending on how much Valve charges them of course).
 
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119gb with about 10 games not installed

Its grown a fair bit recently as I purchased all the Stalker games.
 
109 GB (117,451,633,081 bytes)

Thats not counting on the however many GB F1 2010 Will take up and i have a few large games not installed. So mabye 140GB in total.
 
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