nadoom: as it stands the amiga OS market is shrinking, there is no way im going to by a different platform eg ppc i just dont have the space or money, amiga could really have gone some where without people trying to extract as much capital out of it as they can, e.g. custom motherboards.
Custom and low-volume hardware is usually expensive and prone to design flaws. People don't notice the flaws as much just because there's fewer people looking for problems. Trying to extract as much cash from this kind of hardware is a popular idea (like, Kodak charging $5,000 for a "workstation" with dual 800Mhz CPUS, while single-CPU 2Ghz machines sell for $1,000), but it rarely works well.
uncharted: Where's your orthogonal persistance when I need it?
The current buzzphrase is "transparrent persistence." Funny how the software that does its job properly is always supposed to be invisible. Doesn't make it easy to market, does it? Well, unless you hype something that doesn't really do anything. :-)
I can't imagine anyone getting upset over this review. It doesn't say that much, even from a newbie's perspective.
From the article: Another problem is that going the x86 route means you suddenly have a lot more competition: Linux, BSD, Zeta/Haiku, and maybe even SkyOS and Syllable. And last but not least, it would introduce the concept of piracy to Amiga OS4, depriving Hyperion of possible sales.
I find both points rediculous. First, OS4 is going to compete against these OSes no matter what. It's about the features of the OS, not the hardware on which it runs. Apple is x86, now. Oh noes! Teh Mac is squashed by eevil M$?!
As for piracy, I think people should try using some of the software I used to use at work. Most of the software required some low-level drivers that would only work with one specific kind of machine. Getting that software to run on generic hardware was a real challenge. Besides, there are plenty of Macs out there. Why isn't a bootleg copy of OS4 already available for Macintosh? Piracy isn't just an x86 problem, and EFI has all sorts of new DRM options. Hell, how many generic PC motherboards out there use EFI? That alone would be an effective lockout mechanism, at least for the time being.