Jörgen,
I have no intent to troll, or to stir up crap with this response.
The problem here is one of egos and rumormongering. Amigaworld.net was started because they wanted a "pure" place to discuss the Amiga One and to worship Amiga Inc and it's employees. They vehemently disagreed with my "open" policy of supporting everything that was aimed at the Amiga community, not just Amiga Inc.
My policy was embraced at a time when it truly seemed (to me) that Amiga Inc were all but dead, and there were other brightly shining alternatives available. (Boy was I wrong on that one...)
I understand their stance, and I don't hold it against them at all, but I disagreed with it at the time, hence AW.net was born. Hell, Amiga.org itself was born because I saw needs that the now defunct Amiga Web Directory didn't fulfill, so who am I to complain?
Even before Genesi entered the limelight (arguably to divide the Amiga community and as Bill Buck's personal revenge on Bill McEwen*), I was personally being berated and debased by the "inner circle" Amiga Inc crowd because of my (now proven correct) stance against the decision to only support the PPC, so I'm not sure that even had Genesi not come around that AmigaWorld.net wouldn't have happened sooner or later.
Now, after several years and lots of bad blood under the bridge because of the open policies of Amiga.org, there is a natural "passive aggressive" animosity towards Amiga.org by some, (certainly not all) of the AW.net staff. This has been accentuated by the relative slow and painful death of Amiga Inc and the failure to finalize AmigaOS4 by Hyperion over the past 5 (near 6) years.
Of course, I personally have made lots of mistakes along the way that I truly wish I could take back, and I've done my own damage to the online Amiga community that I never intended to do, and that I truly wish had never, ever happened.
In the end, my life has gotten complicated, outside of Amiga.org, and I cannot help (from my current perspective) but to look back and laugh at the childish stupidity displayed by lots of the people involved over the years (myself included) in thinking that the Amiga was universally important in the grand scheme of things, rather than the enjoyable hobby that it is.
Based on that knowledge I have, in fact, over the last few years made several peace offerings and cooperation proposals to a few members of the AW.net staff, only to be met with mockery and even derision, so in the end, I've made the conscious decision to stop trying and let nature run it's course.
I sincerely wish that we could "all just get along", but I'm not sure that'll ever happen. Amigaworld.net has their purpose, and their visitors. Amiga.org has our own purpose, and our own visitors (most of whom thankfully overlap with both sites). There's absolutely nothing wrong with that.
In the end, the Amiga is just a hobby now, as it should be. Not really sure that it was ever anything more, despite my own desires to make it such. The people involved in supporting the Amiga community (certainly not Amiga Inc) are happy with their efforts, and it's natural to resist change.
Besides, combining efforts would only lead to a situation where friction was created between the people involved over how things should be done or certain events handled, and we certainly don't need any more controversy in the Amiga community...

Wayne
* Buck's remarks to the Genesi US Web team at Amiwest 2003