1. I didn't mean literally english. I meant 'basic' like commands and structure, hmm lets make a quick example, it reads very human-like.
set thefolder to choose folder
tell application "Finder"
set foldercontents to the kind of every file of folder (thefolder)
end tell
result: {"HTML document", "TextWrangler Document", "NeoOffice Document", "Script", "Plain text", "Plain text", "Script", "Portable Network Graphics image", "Workflow", "Plain text", "HTML document", "Plain text"}
If that's a genuine example then it's both hideous and inconsistent. I mean why have such (tediously) verbose human-friendly language syntax and have the result presented as if it were a C-style declaration of an array of strings?
const char* result[] = { "Foo", "Bar", etc"}; /* look familiar */
After all, proponents of "let's have really human-readable language syntax" usually despise C above all else.
2. ASL requesters are crap, can't imagine many people share your love for them as they need some serious work.
They're functional and lightweight. Sure there's scope for improvement but I wouldn't say they were crap.
3. I already use OSX ^.^.
Enjoy it, then. Is there a reason you want every other OS to behave like it?
4. I've installed AROS and taken a look at it and gone through a list of must-haves in AmigaOS.
AROS is not AmigaOS, it's an AmigaOS clone (for want of a better word). In some respects it's more advanced, in others it's less.
5. Okay so there is a picture viewer included cool, but I said all-encompassing.
Multiview can open
anything you have a datatype for that can be rendered on screen, not just images.