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Author Topic: How dead is the AMiGA OS this time?  (Read 9489 times)

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Offline humppa

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Re: How dead is the AMiGA OS this time?
« on: November 09, 2006, 12:20:38 PM »
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Could we please stop worrying about hardware and start focusing on functionality?


Ok, so what functionality does non-existing hardware have for us? How can we improve the functionality of the OS without hardware?   :-P
 

Offline humppa

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Re: How dead is the AMiGA OS this time?
« Reply #1 on: November 09, 2006, 04:42:59 PM »
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I see no technical reason why it couldn't be released, other than not having as wide driver support as would be desirable.


Ah, that's good to hear. I think most of us Powerup-users will be already very pleased to get an update to 1.5. No need to support all strange clockport-devices. Driver support is IMHO already quite good, ok, Mediator-support is lacking, but I do understand the reasons for that. I am very pleased with MOS Powerup so far, great work guys!
If I would only be able to finally register it... Hey, I will make a nice Paypal donation afterwards (hint, hint). ;-)
 

Offline humppa

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Re: How dead is the AMiGA OS this time?
« Reply #2 on: November 09, 2006, 04:51:57 PM »
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Porting to a dead platform is not a way forward, only the most blinded zealot would think that such a move would be anything other then stupifyingly shortsighted.


Ok then, please point us at the current alternatives on the PPC-market? Are there any other proven, relatively cheap and powerful PPC-platforms that are available in numbers and that have a future path? No? The only alternative would be to go x86, but before doing that, you would first need to assess what you are really aiming at with your OS.
If you want to go the commercial route and want to target at the desktop users, then there might be no other way than going x86. Hyperions problem is exactly that: I guess they originally planned to make some money with their OS, but how realistic is that on a license-restricted "only-PPC" and "we need custom HW" niche market?
The targets of the MOS-team might be different, for most of us they might still appear rather fuzzy, so I just wouldn't risk to tell them which route they should go.