Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Author Topic: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?  (Read 4950 times)

Description:

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline AmiDelfTopic starter

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: May 2002
  • Posts: 691
    • Show only replies by AmiDelf
    • http://www.amitopiatv.com
New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« on: March 06, 2003, 08:38:13 AM »
If you where Commodore and still lived today. What sort of Amiga would you made? AmigaONE, a new super hyper fast AGA custom based chipset, or what else?

20bit Paula? AGA++ 32 bit Virtual3D chip? Zorro8 with 800mhz bus? Anything?

Do you really miss the Amiga days or not? Tell me. That would be just interesting...

Regards,
Michal Bergseth, editor of Amitopia
url: www.amitopia.tk
I love and respect people which care! And not those with
a heart made of stone.
 

Offline DaveP

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Feb 2002
  • Posts: 2116
    • Show only replies by DaveP
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #1 on: March 06, 2003, 08:43:24 AM »
I want an Amiga that could drive me to work and back, then when there do
all my work for me.

I think people assume that C= had infinite resources to develop anything
but even at the time of the chickenhead death it had got to the point
where custom development of four chips was looking prohibitive.

If C= had been alive today it would have gone back to building PCs and would
have queitly dropped the Amiga. The lure of the 1995-2000 market would have
been too much for them.

We like to believe that but for C=s demise the Amiga would be at least as mainstream as the Mac.

Very unlikely in the extreme.

Don't believe it.
Hate figure. :lol:
 

Offline Ferry

Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #2 on: March 06, 2003, 09:03:37 AM »
Quote

DaveP wrote:

If C= had been alive today it would have gone back to building PCs and would
have queitly dropped the Amiga.


With an intelligent management, I don't think so. The BIG mistake (al least, one of them :-) that made C= was to use the HUGE incoming cash flow from the Amiga sales to develop a PC line, leaving the Amiga side without advertising and even with a good repairing  and customer service. They wanted to enter the "serious" market, forgetting the "multimedia" one, and the last one was the good one.

Perhaps the Amiga was too advanced even in the business side, or they were too short-sighted...

Anyway, this is just a "what if...".

Saluditos,

Ferrán
Amiga user since 1988
AOS4 Betatester
Member of ATO Spain
PiStorm project collaborator (Docs)
A1200/060/256MB/SCSI
A1 XE-G4/933
A500+/PiStorm
 

Offline whabang

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Mar 2002
  • Posts: 7270
    • Show only replies by whabang
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #3 on: March 06, 2003, 09:09:43 AM »
If Commodere would still be alive that would mean that the PC market wouldn't be as big as it is today. ( hey, someone has to be the biggest, right? :-) )

Much of the performance race that we have seen in the PC market would never have happened.
The hardware platform would probably have been closed, so third party hard ware would be rare.
Commodore would most likely have developed some kind of new chipsets for sound and video. The sound would have been controlled by a DSP ( didn't they do that in some models of the A3000? ) and the video chipsets would have been 3D capable and controlled by something like D3D.
Beating the dead horse since 2002.
 

Offline JurassicCamper

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: May 2002
  • Posts: 635
    • Show only replies by JurassicCamper
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #4 on: March 06, 2003, 09:42:15 AM »
Any one listen to Alan Redhouse MP3 from the London show last november.

He mentioned a new CD32.

The next Artica is alleged to support onboard video and at a higher AGP rate.

On the A1 mailing list Alan mentions reading his article in total Amiga coming soon.

[speculation]
New Amiga Games Console Perhaps
[/speculation]


What about all those A1200 that are in peoples lofts and cupboards etc. gathering dust.

Get them interested and get them in use again.

How about a A1 mobo with the same layout as the A1200 mobo, onboard ATI Video and 256MB Ram. Socketed G3 or G4.

You could just swap out your mobo, useful  for people who have already invested in Power Towers / Eyetech Towers Micronik Towers etc.
The Lack of PCI slots is not a problem as the Expansion edge connector could be the PCI Bus for a PCI Daugther card, this would match up with existing towers like it does with mediators and grex etc.

Just an idea :-?  :-P  :-P
A1200T PPC 330Mhz in a Custom Modified Fractal Design R3 Case
 

Offline DaveP

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Feb 2002
  • Posts: 2116
    • Show only replies by DaveP
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #5 on: March 06, 2003, 09:42:53 AM »
@ferran

Your assumption is based on the market conditions remaining static.

C= entered the PC market as a clone manufacturer with too high
expectations for the time. If they had survived 1994/5 market conditions they
would have dropped the Amiga ( which did not have enough sales to
support them AFTER they dropped the PC business ). They took the wrong
gamble ( that the PC business would remain loss making and that the
Amiga business would grow ) and died.

The Amiga was NEVER popular as a serious PC contender for
desktop or small office use and sales were dipping in 1993-1994
anyway.

Even the PC sales fuelled by Doom would not have been hindered by
the A1200, A4000, A4000T trio and there was no way that AAA based
machines were on the horizon as contenders for the games niche
before 1996 based on C=s development to shelf typical lifecycle.

I know its nice to look back with misty eyes and say "The Amiga woulda
been a contender" but it just isn't true. Within a very narrow definition
the Amiga was a success.

For once it would be nice if people could accept the realities of the
situation and the past. Without that they are easy pickings for the
non Amiga zealous and have unrealistic expectations of what
Amiga Inc and co can and should do.
Hate figure. :lol:
 

Offline Eer0

  • Jr. Member
  • **
  • Join Date: Apr 2002
  • Posts: 63
    • Show only replies by Eer0
    • http://www.wolfclaw.nu
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #6 on: March 06, 2003, 10:20:14 AM »
Intel P4 3.06Ghz
Nvidia Gforce FX
Soundblaster Live 5.1
UW SCSI 3 200Gb
And ofcourse AmigaOS4

Dont see the point of making custom made boards/chipset etc whatever when you only really care about is the OS  :-o
It\\\'s not my problem that you read what I am typing and not understand what I am meaning.
 

Offline Siggy

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Join Date: Mar 2003
  • Posts: 212
    • Show only replies by Siggy
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #7 on: March 06, 2003, 10:38:38 AM »
Quote
Even the PC sales fuelled by Doom would not have been hindered by
the A1200, A4000, A4000T trio and there was no way that AAA based
machines were on the horizon as contenders for the games niche
before 1996 based on C=s development to shelf typical lifecycle.


A very true statement. I totally agree.

Never underestimate the power of the games market - there are people I know who have 'games machines' comparable in cost and power to my editing system (and that takes some beating), all to get the upper hand in UT (or whatever the FPS game of the second is).

I remember seeing Castle Wolfenstein for the first time on a friends PC when it came out - and even then I felt a chill that was the beginning of the end.

Through the late 80's I'd seen folks that had PC's ditching them for Amigas, mainly for playing games (this was in Australia, my old home, timelines may vary elsewhere). But then in the 90's these same folks were the first to switch back as a plethora of FPS's hit the markets.

Then the blows of Windows 3.1 - Windows95 - suddenly your average Joe User decided that taking work home from the office AND playing games made the PC a very attractive deal.

I stuck it out till 97, when I moved to the U.S... I sold my systems and put the money in the bank to buy a new Ami with... It's still in the bank too, waiting :-)

As for what I'd like to see...
When I saw the first screenshots in Australian Personal Computer, my jaw dropped.. I'd like to relive that moment.
At a time when the PC did 16 colors - the Mac did 2 - and the best selling home computer was the C64, it was so incredible that I was stunned.

Apart from the 'aint it cool' factor - I'd like to see a decent instruction set for ASM programming.. That was my first and longest love with the Amiga. I stopped programming the x86 in ASM after 3 days, and I never did it again (only C nowadays - on the linux box).

Lastly - something that a company can't really provide - a rekindling of the community spirit (Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that it doesn't exist , I'd like to see it grow). That's what attracted me to Linux when I eventually did go x86. They have their flamewars and zealotry as much as the next group - but there's also a sense of freedom and sharing.
The Microsoft mentality seems to be 'make a buck' - go browse Tucows to see what I mean.. scribble some source, cripple it and charge 30 bucks. In the linux community there is more 'Hey, check this out -- ain't it cool?'. I think this is the great strength of the Linux community, and I'd like to see it propagate.

 Then again - we could have this right now, no need to wait for a new set of hardware to hit the market.

Siggy.
Quote
The TV business is uglier than most things.
 It is normally perceived as some kind of cruel and shallow money trench through the heart of the Journalism industry, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free and good men die like dogs,
 

Offline Ayashoka

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Join Date: Sep 2002
  • Posts: 45
    • Show only replies by Ayashoka
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #8 on: March 06, 2003, 10:43:12 AM »
Wel they did have the (mythical) AAA chipset...
with 24bit screen and 16 bit sound.. And that was way back
They were opting voor a RISC processor aswell...

If that got trough and the PC open structure never got up maybe it'd still be relative custom hardware.
Mac in some way is also closed...

Can't say. Would the custom hardware structure be broken by outside companies?
PC plug-in cards gave way to new companies, but a closed system would have braked that development.
But if it'd be custom i'd would have worked 1001%

My 2 cents as they say.
No time to close every hole in this post... so fire away :-D
 

Offline commodore_jim

  • Jr. Member
  • **
  • Join Date: Mar 2002
  • Posts: 60
    • Show only replies by commodore_jim
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #9 on: March 06, 2003, 12:18:13 PM »
Ooh, I love these ones.

Regardless of whether Commodore had survived or not, I think one thing's for certain - the PC was always going to become as big as it did. If Commodore hadn't folded, they probably would have realised that the future (at least the immediate future) lay not in custom hardware but in off-the-shelf hardware.

What they may have done was eventually drop the Amiga or perhaps license out its chipset to interested parties to generate revenue. Maybe we would have seen Amiga clones. Either way, we'd soon have seen the end of the custom Amigas we all knew and loved as it simply would not have been financially viable for Commodore (who weren't in a financially robust state anyway from the early 90's on) to keep designing and producing custom computers. Competing with the likes of NVIDIA and Voodoo would have required major spending. Where would this money have come from?

By 1993 Commodore were hemorrhaging cash. It was reported that if sales of the CD32 had been slightly better, the company may have been saved but for how long?

For anyone who has seen the excellent Deathbed Vigil Video by Dave Haynie, I think the newspaper cutting posted on one of the walls at the West Chester plant sums it all up: PC Giant Fails To Adapt.

Commodore failed to adapt like so many other  companies. The fact that their hardware was streets ahead of the PC and Apple equivalents of the time wasn't enough. They couldn't cut it competitvely in what is possibly the most vicious, cut-throat industry there is.

Of course a lot of companies in similarly tight spots did adapt and pull through. But this required strong managament and a clear understanding of the computer market. Commodore (mis)management is something we're all sadly familar with.
 

Offline ksk

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Join Date: Feb 2002
  • Posts: 381
    • Show only replies by ksk
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #10 on: March 06, 2003, 12:23:32 PM »
"New custom based Amiga, ...?"
Every cent is better spent in updating tha AmigaOS. Sorry.
 

Offline carls

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Mar 2002
  • Posts: 1047
    • Show only replies by carls
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #11 on: March 06, 2003, 01:26:45 PM »
I'd rather like to see AmigaOS for x86. Really.
Maybe an option to buy a custom machine based on x86 technology, somewhat like the SGI PCs.
Amiga: Too weird to live, too rare to die.
 

Offline Ferry

Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #12 on: March 06, 2003, 01:42:31 PM »
Quote

DaveP wrote:

Your assumption is based on the market conditions remaining static.


I'm not assuming nor guessing nor speculating. I have been a computer salesman for almost 10 years,  and I have sold both Amiga and C= PC, amongst other.

Commodore  offered me to be the official promotor of the Amiga computer in Spain (when they even had an office in my country), but I did not accepted (one of my best friends did), so I can speak with a little knowledge at least... :-)

Quote

C= entered the PC market as a clone manufacturer with too high
expectations for the time. If they had survived 1994/5 market conditions they
would have dropped the Amiga


The Commodore PC range was one of the WORST line of computers I have ever seen: they were poorly equipped and very expensive compared to many other brands.

In the meantime, the Amiga was selling very, very well, with nearly no advertisement.

Quote

They took the wrong
gamble ( that the PC business would remain loss making and that the
Amiga business would grow ) and died.


I cannot agree. When they jumped into the PC market wagon, it was already  moving, faster and faster. But they did it with the wrong foot... And, meanwhile, they let the Amiga market slowly die, with no support and a wrong and late developing of new models. A1200 and A4000 were more a patch than a new development: they were good designs cut down just to reduce costs, since they were already losing money in the PC side.

Quote

The Amiga was NEVER popular as a serious PC contender for
desktop or small office use and sales were dipping in 1993-1994
anyway.


It was in multimedia (graphics, sound) and games, which has proved to be the most powerfull market.

Quote

Even the PC sales fuelled by Doom would not have been hindered by
the A1200, A4000, A4000T trio and there was no way that AAA based
machines were on the horizon as contenders for the games niche
before 1996 based on C=s development to shelf typical lifecycle.


That was one of the main mistakes: too much time between new machines, but they were occupied developing and promoting PCs... :-(

Quote

For once it would be nice if people could accept the realities of the
situation and the past.


To accept something you have to know it first, and to know it the right way, not with  half-truths and misinformations.

Quote

Without that they are easy pickings for the
non Amiga zealous and have unrealistic expectations of what
Amiga Inc and co can and should do.


That's why we all should know the truth about the past, if we don't want to repeat it.

Saluditos,

Ferrán.
Amiga user since 1988
AOS4 Betatester
Member of ATO Spain
PiStorm project collaborator (Docs)
A1200/060/256MB/SCSI
A1 XE-G4/933
A500+/PiStorm
 

Offline itix

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Oct 2002
  • Posts: 2380
    • Show only replies by itix
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #13 on: March 06, 2003, 01:42:51 PM »
Isn't AmigaOne some kind of computer with custom chip set? Today everything which is non-X86 could be considered being custom.
My Amigas: A500, Mac Mini and PowerBook
 

Offline B00tDisk

  • VIP / Donor - Lifetime Member
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Dec 2002
  • Posts: 1670
    • Show only replies by B00tDisk
    • http://www.thedelversdungeon.com
Re: New custom based Amiga, Whats your dream Amiga then?
« Reply #14 on: March 06, 2003, 04:09:30 PM »
Quote

itix wrote:
Isn't AmigaOne some kind of computer with custom chip set? Today everything which is non-X86 could be considered being custom.


That would be an incorrect assertion.  The "new" "Amiga" uses industry standard BIOS (some tweaking by Hyperion aside), board logic, and system buses.  It is, in effect, a PC system board with a BIOS and onboard logic configured to utilize a PPC CPU instead of an x86 (Intel, AMD, Via-Cyrix etc.)

So in the over all the new mainboards use commodity parts instead of parts built specifically for that mainboard.

Back away from the EU-SSR!