Bhogget wrote:
The drivers exist - in binary form - but they're good drivers, they're free (as in beer) and they fully support the card features.
Good if you define "good" as being "incompatible and buggy as hell", that is. The complaints of Linux users about these drivers are constant. Change kernel, you have to wait for update. Choose any CPU but x86, too bad. This goes totally against the Linux mindset.
The suggestion that one company is evil and closed while the other is open and helpful is laughable.
And your implying that if one doesn't use these big companies for a computing solution then the result must be crap by default is equally laughable. You are trapped in this world where only the cutting edge is any good, which is really not better than some who believe anything x86 is inherently evil just by existing. Or is it that you simply believe that supporting any hardware other than that you currently own is a waste of time?
So the A1 was designed specifically for an OS which would only exist years later, right?
YES! It was! Hardware designs for the A1 were being processed years before a single line of code were being written for OS4. How have you missed that?
And then, when it was decided that the Escena A1 was vapor, and Eyetech offered the TeronCX (the board that mostly closely matched what Escena A1 would have been), OS4 was still only just a bare skeleton. So I'm not wrong, it's just you who who seem to be rather ill-informed. Which is surprising considering how long you've been hanging around the forums, even if it is only to push one subject always only.
A1 was meant for OS4, and isn't priced or supported or publicised for anything else. Who'd even pay Amiga Inc.'s brand tax for a board that wasn't intended to run OS4?
"tweak" to one person is a "workaround" to another one. As long as special mofications are needed, of any sort, that's a workaround to me. Scale is irrelevant.
Oh, really. The difference is that one will be totally unstable and lose data, the other that it will be inefficient. How is that insignificant? Don't mix semantics with practicalities, Bill.