by drHirudo on 2005/11/6 10:54:43
It's a standalone operating system aimed at being compatible with AmigaOS, but it's not AmigaOS, like MorphOS is not an AmigaOS, despite it's also AmigaOS binary compatible (at some level). They don't belong to the AmigaOS version tree.
Of course it's not AmigaOS, that's owned by someone else. It is a open source version of AmigaOS and even MOS is based on AROS. That does not make it a foriegn OS, but a very fimliar one to all of us who have owned Amigas over the years. No where did I say that AROS should be in Hyperion's CVS, but Hyperion is free to do so, if they so wished, since it is under a open source license.
If I write an OS for university project, which is source or binary level compatible with Windows (at some degree) would that mean that I would write a version of Windows then?
Sure. I would say that is a drHirudo version of windows then. Wether you open source it or not is another matter.
Have I connected enough dots for you, or do I need to go into further detail why AROS is an alternative to closed sourced AOS/Amiga-likeOSs?
Dammy