Mangar: Why are the developers of AOS4 tying the OS to specific hardware. This is how the Amiga got in this mess in the first place by not allowing Amiga-Compatible computers.
I guess they're trying to mimic Apple, but with little success. Apple stays in business by selling apps, services, and other goodies with their computers, not just hardware and a raw OS.
Hyperion also mentioned piracy as having a major role in the decision. By avoiding x86, the likliness of getting OS4 running on unlicensed hardware is less. Of course, any platform developer will tell you that by restricting the volume, you almost guarantee that critical mass cannot be reached. Everyone pirates Photoshop and Flash, yet, these are the kind of world-standard applications that drive the Internet.
Let's face it. Flash is the greatest media format invented so far this century. It runs on anything, and far, far better than Sun ever promised Java could. It includes a good scripting system that may evolve into a real programming language, and it's only a matter of time until Macromedia adds 3D graphics to replace all those "fake" 3D tools people have already been using for years.
Mangar: They could make a lot more money off the OS than with hardware. Palm realized this when they started to license their OS to Sony and other PDA manufacturers.
Again, I find it amusing that Hyperion is looking towards other PPC platforms to make money. OS4 may be lean on resources while operating, but it's also lean on capabilites. My brother-in-law works on Java-powered cell phones, and I can tell you right now that OS4 doesn't have a chance breaking into markets where such a low-porformance, resource-hungry platform like Java running on Linux is making an explosion.
Interoperability is more important than resources, and always has been. Make a 200GB hard drive, and software developers will find a way to fill it up. Apple makes an OS that has a 12 Gig installation and runs poorly with less than 512MB of RAM, and people are buying in excess of "1,000 a day."
Seehund: As for AInc, they don't seem to have given a {NRRRT!} about AmigaOS when they accepted Eyetech's compulsory licensing idea
Why bother with a new AmigaOS when int
ent already runs fine on Linux?
Seehund: Officially AInc do claim to welcome new hardware vendor licensees. In reality, everyone who so far has enquired and even negotiated (even to the point of a missing signature on the licensing agreement!) has been ignored or eventually turned down.
When I bought my SDK, I found it impossible to contact Amiga Inc. to register. After a month, I gave up.
This was about the same time their phones were shut off. :-)
Tigger: If one of your directors writes you a bad contract, and you sign it, saying its not your companies fault is an incorrect premise in my belief system.
I feel this way about the hardware issue. If everyone had tested things more thouroughly first, or bought from a reputible manufacturer, maybe these problems wouldn't have been so severe.
That's the way it is in small, proprietary markets, as my experience with using Kodak photographic workstations shows. $5,000 for a 400Mhz dual-Xeon workstation with striped SCSI drives, which is less powerful than my $1,000 single-CPU 2.4Ghz P4 with a Western Digital SATA drive? Oh, please -- enter the 21st century! Also, that workstation price is only for the hardware, not the additional $35,000 software license, which was based on WinNT 4 (the company claims their software wouldn't even run on Win2000).
Tigger: Sorry Paul, I'm not wrong, as has been pointed out by me, and half a dozen others who actually design hardware for a living half of the things that Eyetech blame the Via chip for, don't even go through the southbridge.
While I haven't bothered to research any of the causes of the AmigaOne issues, I can say that it's all too easy to blame VIA due to their reputation. People blame VIA for hardware issues like they blame Microsoft for software issues.
Given that Mai Logic's website hasn't been updated in a long time, and has lots of b0rken links and images, it really looks like their venture into PPC chipsets hasn't gone too well. That's all I really need to know to avoid the company.
Tigger: ...thats why the Terrasoft people didnt sell the board, thats why all the Linux builds abandoned the board, you think they are all wrong and you are right??
Either that, or they don't want to bother. There's other plaforms to support, now that Mai seems to be MIA.