lemme comment quickly on subject of "fragmenting the community". because i think it really is an issue.
we have now four main camps everybody knows about and none is particularly happy about the split: amiga, morphos, os4 and aros.
then on amiga we have different 68k cpu versions there is a lot dedicated optimized software versions for. which is pain in the back, because its likely that users are using wrong software versions on wrong cpu and dont know what goes wrong. this is certainly annoying.
then there is aros with all the supported platforms. good thing about is that whatever gets into the repository it is built for all platforms mutually. but all other contributions must be compiled for every platform separately.
now, we have exotic niches like warpos. just as we speak there is an (interesting) project to get warpos working on mediator/sonnet setup i have already pointed to before:
http://eab.abime.net/showthread.php?t=76633&page=3it is all fine but this is just another incompatible binary platform.
another example is aros68k. although it executes amiga software and aros68k hunk binaries should run natively on amiga except they are linked against aros exclusive libraries, everything else would have to be defined as just another separate platform when putting it on, lets say, aminet.
taking it all into account, even though i am one of very few open aros68k supporters, my concern is to find a lowest common denominator to achieve maximal gain with a minimal effort for all or most these platforms. im not trying to prevent anyone from anything, just placing food for thought in this context.