Thellenbow wrote:
@Catherder
I see your point, but you are talking to a lot of techies here and not business people. The buzz word is Mass Marketing. It's like pop music, you only need one hit CD and you can retire. Coming up with a product that aunt Mary will buy is the way to go.
Exactly...
I'm saying one thing, and most of the people here are thinking "new Amiga". I'm not talking about a new Amiga. I'm talking about an Amiga RetroGamer or TVGamer. I already know every single game can be licenced without an issue (excluding the ones that have no known IP holder). There is not a game company in the world that would not lisence their old stuff. It's smart business sense.
I couldn't care less what software Commodore or Amiga International owned, it makes no difference. I couldn't care less about productivity software and applications, they don't even factor in to it.
I couldn't care less how an OLD Amiga chip was manufactured - I don't want to make one. I care how it was designed - and if this means simply emulating, or reverse-engineering each chip to come up with a new single chip encompassing the entire Amiga (lets just stick with an A500 for now) so be it. It's not a hard thing to do - this is 18 year old technology we're talking about. Any off-the-shelf integrated RF modulator would work with this, a cost of production of $0.72 per unit, and there's already 3 to pick from that are used in other retro devices.
I couldn't care less about expansions, networking, hard drives, floppy drives, or anything remotely related to a real computer - I want to make hand-held stand-alone game units that contain 10 games. (Or one that has a propritary cartridge slot that allows you to plug in various game sets).
And yes, I do know a bit about manufacturing computer products and I have worked with a few overseas firms getting designs fabricated. (I was head of IT/IS at AST Computers). I also have a pretty solid Amiga background -- I do know what I'm talking about.
I also know that with just liscence agreements from EA alone I could pump out 2 different Amiga TVGamers that had 10 quality games on each one -- I also know that one agreement would get the rights to all Hewson and Epyx titles, and one agreement with Atari would get another eleven game companys IP. I'm not just talking out my arse...
The only thing holding this back is: who owns the IP rights to the Amiga chipsets. That's all I want to know. :-)