@Hammer - so let me summize - on OS which nobody loves (Windoze) which has never worked well ?
"Love" is not an intangible/rational factor.
To illustrate an example, i.e. it works well enough and earning sustainable cash flow for
www.locus.com.au**, solution6.com.au**, myob.com.au** and 'etc'.
and has always been sluggish,
Please quantify “Sluggish”.
running on a hot-chip design is nevertheless unbeatable?
Note that MS Windows NT 4.0(up to SP3) runs PowerPC.
I just don't understand the logic, just where and how do you propose Windoze moves in the future - each move destroys its immense base.
In regards to “Windoze moves in the future - each move destroys its immense base”, have you tried MS Windows Longhorn** X86-32 build 40xx or have you tried MS Windows XP AMD64 Edition** (with WOW64)?
**Beta releases.
Within these product scope, the legacy (includes skills, tool chain, development and etc) is mostly preserved. Other Windows editions are an extension to the main product lines.
Note that MS has VirtualPC and FX32 style technology (via Intel) for future non-X86 Windows XP and Server editions.
Mac bit the bullet (finnally) and remerged as Mac OSx and in doing so fragmnted even its tiny market share - do you think MS could do a similar thing and not fall apart at the seams.
Unlike Apple, DotNET framework and VirtualPC technology is designed to unify the code base.
The fact is that people have had a gut full of MS, anything that looks half good at the moment has a running chance
IF that was the realistic case then the OS/2 Warp 4.5 with Win32 compatibility(via third party add-on) may have a chance for a come back. But sadly, this is not the case.
in my opinion the A1 and OS4.0 look a lot better than Half-good!.
In regards to “looks”, an integrated DirOpus 5 with AOS4.0 style icon bar per windows would have been nice i.e. integrating some modern GUI elements.
Secondly, one of the main problems with AOS is its middleware support for application development.
From your comments it seems that you have the idea that things just keep on going on, that MS by some act of God has already planned an escape route and that the right time old Billy-boy will make his move
I’m still waiting for a creditable catalyst for change.
MS is dead - its just that it has a livily corpse.
Such statement is in the realms of "reality distortion field" (TM).
To ram my point through;
Can AOS4.0 match Windows and Sound Storm/SB Audigy 2 ZS software suite?
Can AOS4.0 match DirectX 9.0b?
Can AOS4.0 match Windows’s OBDC functionality?
Can AOS4.0 match Windows’s OLE functionality?
Is Oracle 9i available for AOS (middleware issues)?
Are there object oriented case tools for AOS?
Are there object oriented visual development environment for AOS (in the level Borland C Builder/J Builder/Delphi/Visual Studio dotNET 2003)?
Is there even a fully implemented Java VM for AOS?
Is there a Windows 2003 Server** level based on AOS? (**near brain dead server maintenance)
Can AOS deliver multi-user support?
Can AOS deliver roaming profiles?
Can AOS drive wireless LAN?
Should I add some more?
Amiga doesn’t need to compete with Windows/X86 Linux i.e. Alan’s “leisure computing” targeted market should be satisfactory enough.