By the way... AmigaOS 4 is toxic. AmigaOS 4 is poisoned by developers who have seen MorphOS and AROS source code. I dont know if any of MorphOS developers have seen AmigaOS source code but I know that RJ Mical has seen AmigaOS source code and did consult MorphOS developers long ago. But it doesnt end there. AmigaOS developed at Commodore was poisoned by developers who had seen source code from other operating systems and ideas were adopted to AmigaOS.
But hazydave's view are understandable. He is not a software guy and he is just wrong about everything software related.
I wouldn't say Dave is wrong about everything software related but his comment was ill advised because:
1) he is not a lawyer
2) he probably didn't really know
3) he doesn't seem to really care
It's not his legal battle. The Amiga is already dead in his eyes. As Bil said, "The dead may never die." In my eyes, any companies or individuals that loot the dead C= and try to do something good with what they salvage are much better than scum companies like Amiga Inc. that try to make as much money as possible and care nothing about the intellectual property. I wish there was a law that any software that is not updated in 7 years would become free.
But Amiga had not been proven successful.
True, but I believe the Amiga sales were increasing at least (with very little advertising). It was a tough economy to sell a high priced home computer into. The video game industry had recently collapsed and the price of computer hardware had plummeted. Early Macintosh sales were not good either. Many users stayed with the cheap old 8 bitters that had an abundance of cheap software and waited for the prices to fall and new software for the next generation computers. There was a question at the time whether high end computers were viable and could be profitable at all. C= was better at cost reducing the cheaper designs like the C64. They put Atari out of business (no bankruptcy but it was sold cheap). Apple was saved by a niche in education with the Apple II. The Apple IIgs outsold the Macintosh despite being released in September 1986.