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Offline StarrunnerTopic starter

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A thought on the Future of Amiga
« on: December 05, 2006, 04:21:43 PM »
So in my travels with things, a thought occurred to me.

I noticed that there are different groups (factions) inside the Amiga community.  It appears that over time splits have developed and they are deep.

I've visited some of the other Amiga sites and they seem to be right or left wing for a lack of better terms.  At the current rate of affairs, I suspect a statement I saw on here will be more true than not in the Future:

There will be more Amiga portals than Amiga users.

So in my brain a idea formed itself.  What if the the Amiga.org community banded together and created our own path for an Amiga solution?  Amongst us, we seem to be the most level headed and stable lot of the Amiga 'factions' in existence.  We are not bogged down in the unfathomable mass of corporate double speak, lies and pure drivel that comes from the corporate end.  Most of us seem to be flexible enough to love the Classic Amiga and its solution, while still encompassing the thought of something similar that is not quite the Amiga, but provides a solution close enough in reality.  

I am not a programmer, or a businessman of any note.  I am not an ad exec or CEO.  I am a person who loves the Amiga, what it offered and want a solution to the dread of Windows Vista or being forced into something totally estoteric for my next OS/computer platform.

Perhaps I am making this sound easy.  I know it is not.  I know that it would be a monumentous undertaking.  I think it would be worth it however, to preserve something we all love and enjoy.  Something that was once great, and could easy be great again.

I am throwing this out as a suggestion.  I know little about how to implement this.  I would be willing to give it a try at the least.

Thought, comments and the like are welcome.
 

Offline Magic-Merl

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #1 on: December 05, 2006, 05:26:10 PM »
A little pessimistic but wouldn't that mean another faction would then be in existence?

Offline Marco

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #2 on: December 05, 2006, 05:33:19 PM »
The problem is, level-headed as the average Aorg user is, there is still a lot of factionalism even here. The community is not split along community lines but the faction lines set up by the 'players' involved in the Amiga name. The infamous 'Red' and 'Blue' camps - the zealots who see some sort of war between the 'official' AmigaInc and their prodcut (or lack thereof). And the, frankly more realistic supporters of Genesi/MorphOS who can at least buy a vaguely modern computer and OS - and even have a proper net browser from what I hear.

These two camps often also include an overlapping group of even more biggoted user - the PPC zealots, these holy-warriors make it their divine duty to banish the evils of modernity and success from Amigaland by shouting down every attempt to seriously move the platform to x86 and now AMD64. They are pitted in eternal battle with the dread fiends of AROS (who I think need a colour-camp of their own, I'm always partial to yellow in these situations).

MorphOS was probably the best way forward when PPC on the desktop was still around and had a future, since the Apple transition though... Meh. (n.b. anyone who mentions Cell or Wii [or  IBM and their customisation hoo-hah] will force me to unleash the terrible hordes of my mutant flying monkeys! j/k) It is still the best developed of the 3 Amigoid clones, but I (and I'm sure a few others) don't want to shell out for obscure hardware to run it. Especially since the cessation of PegasosII production; Efika just doesn't set my heart a flutter. So to speak.

AROS at the moment also has very little future, it has the most potential of the 3 clones but until the devs get some serious organisation and shake things up they're never gonna win over the community at large. They may have no schedule, but I don't see 'em rocking. They need a Linus Torvalds type character, a benevolent dictator who rallies the troops and gets them to produce.

OS4 and Amiga are dead in the water frankly. They have shown the world exactly how NOT to run a company, The OS Hyperion delivered doesn't really seem to do anything that MorphOS doesn't, less in fact as you can't seriously browse the net yet. The boing sticker doesn't really mean much to a lot of people anymore, No one who ever made Amiga great has anything to do with the current incarnation of Amiga. I'd rather buy a computer from Irving Gould. At least he knew to hire someone competent to make the money, then fire them and do a runner.

The classic scene is I think the only one that people can still rally around. It is unassailably Amiga. It has the most activity going on at this time, and unites both those seeking a retro 'fix' and those who realise that you don't really need a 12GHz septupal core Intel Core15-Ultra-Mega-Overheat to do a bit of word processing, artwork or use a spreadsheet. Projects like the MiniMig, Clone-A, the AROS Kickstart replacement, Motorollin's 3.9 ROM hack, lots of interesting projects that don't concern themselves with the tech race. Which is nice.
[color=6666FF]Iu he nesciti, u dia cun l\\\'urbu azurru, di parinti barbari, \\\'ntre u bunu i virtuusu Cimmiriu[/color][/b]
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Offline StarrunnerTopic starter

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #3 on: December 05, 2006, 05:41:46 PM »
Perhaps it might mean another faction, but if it could combine some forces some how then maybe.
 

Offline Ral-Clan

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #4 on: December 05, 2006, 05:42:19 PM »
Quote
The classic scene is I think the only one that people can still rally around. It is unassailably Amiga. It has the most activity going on at this time, and unites both those seeking a retro 'fix' and those who realise that you don't really need a 12GHz septupal core Intel Core15-Ultra-Mega-Overheat to do a bit of word processing, artwork or use a spreadsheet. Projects like the MiniMig, Clone-A, the AROS Kickstart replacement, Motorollin's 3.9 ROM hack, lots of interesting projects that don't concern themselves with the tech race. Which is nice.


Here, Here!  Well said.  Sums up my sentiments about using the old hardware perfectly.
Music I've made using Amigas and other retro-instruments: http://theovoids.bandcamp.com
 

Offline StarrunnerTopic starter

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #5 on: December 05, 2006, 05:51:48 PM »
Quote

Marco wrote:
The problem is, level-headed as the average Aorg user is, there is still a lot of factionalism even here. The community is not split along community lines but the faction lines set up by the 'players' involved in the Amiga name. The infamous 'Red' and 'Blue' camps - the zealots who see some sort of war between the 'official' AmigaInc and their prodcut (or lack thereof). And the, frankly more realistic supporters of Genesi/MorphOS who can at least buy a vaguely modern computer and OS - and even have a proper net browser from what I hear.

These two camps often also include and overlapping group of even more biggoted user - the PPC zealots, these holy-warriors make it their divine duty to banish the evils of modernity and success from Amigaland by shouting down every attempt to seriously move the platform to x86 and no AMD64. They are pitted in eternal battle with the dread fiends of AROS (who I think need a colour-camp of their own, I'm always partial to yellow in these situations).

MorphOS was probably the best way forward when PPC on the desktop was still around and had a future, since the Apple transition though... Meh. (n.b. anyone who mentions Cell or Wii [or  IBM and their customisation hoo-hah] will force me to unleash the terrible hordes of my mutant flying monkeys! j/k) It is still the best developed of the 3 Amigoid clones, but I (and I'm sure a few others) don't want to shell out for obscure hardware to run it. Especially since the cessation of PegasosII production; Efika just doesn't set my heart a flutter. So to speak.

AROS at the moment also has very little future, it has the most potential of the 3 clones but until the devs get some serious organisation and shake things up they're never gonna win over the community at large. They may have no schedule, but I don't see 'em rocking. They need a Linus Torvalds type character, a benevolent dictator who rallies the troops and gets them to produce.

OS4 and Amiga are dead in the water frankly. They have shown the world exactly how NOT to run a company, The OS Hyperion delivered doesn't really seem to do anything that MorphOS doesn't, less in fact as you can't seriously browse the net yet. The boing sticker doesn't really mean much to a lot of people anymore, No one who ever made Amiga great has anything to do with the current incarnation of Amiga. I'd rather buy a computer from Irving Gould. At least he knew to hire someone competent to make the money, then fire them and do a runner.

The classic scene is I think the only one that people can still rally around. It is unassailably Amiga. It has the most activity going on at this time, and unites both those seeking a retro 'fix' and those who realise that you don't really need a 12GHz septupal core Intel Core15-Ultra-Mega-Overheat to do a bit of word processing, artwork or use a spreadsheet. Projects like the MiniMig, Clone-A, the AROS Kickstart replacement, Motorollin's 3.9 ROM hack, lots of interesting projects that don't concern themselves with the tech race. Which is nice.


Hmmmm...in light of this then perhaps my thought was just wishful thinking.  Very wishful thinking by the look of it.

I had not realised the divide was that deep.  I had done research on both AROS and MorphOS.  Both seemed nice but you are right about points with both OSes.  

I can not see trying to hunt down all the pieces and parts to run a PPC setup with MorphOS.  If I am going to go that far, I minds as well get a Sun box and run Solaris.

As for AROS, you are right that it has the most promise, but it needs much.  I have a copy for eval actually waiting for me to have the time.

I knew years ago that Amiga Inc and OS4.0 was a joke when I got a reply from Bill McEwan that was long and contained many words.  When I subjected it to analysis though, it actually said nothing.

I would love to see a true port to x86 for some kind of AmigaOS.  It would save me from having to go to Linux for my home machine.  It might even save me from going to a Mac for my video production stuff.

Oh well, wishful thinking.
 

Offline StarrunnerTopic starter

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #6 on: December 05, 2006, 05:56:55 PM »
Quote

ral-clan wrote:
Quote
The classic scene is I think the only one that people can still rally around. It is unassailably Amiga. It has the most activity going on at this time, and unites both those seeking a retro 'fix' and those who realise that you don't really need a 12GHz septupal core Intel Core15-Ultra-Mega-Overheat to do a bit of word processing, artwork or use a spreadsheet. Projects like the MiniMig, Clone-A, the AROS Kickstart replacement, Motorollin's 3.9 ROM hack, lots of interesting projects that don't concern themselves with the tech race. Which is nice.


Here, Here!  Well said.  Sums up my sentiments about using the old hardware perfectly.


I loved every Amiga I've owned, even the A4000 that I have trouble with at the current moment.  But something new needs to come along.  Something that puts the Amiga, or at least the OS back on the map.  Let's face it, if you've heard about the fun things that Vista is doing and capable of, you'd be scrambling for an alternative.  I would love to be able to use an Amiga for everything, but had to sell my soul to get my video stuff running...on a Winhos based system.  Now I may have to sell it again, to Mac.

Like I said, perchance to dream.  It would be nice to do something.
 

Offline motorollin

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #7 on: December 05, 2006, 06:00:46 PM »
Why stress over this stuff? Just enjoy each platform for what it is. We don't need to take over the world any more. Amiga as a brand is dead to me now. These days Amiga is all about having fun with whichever flavour(s) of 'Amiga' you choose, and about the community spirit which has kept us all together for all these years.

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Offline bhoggett

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #8 on: December 05, 2006, 06:04:17 PM »
It not one more faction the Amiga scene needs - it's a convergence of the existing ones, so that the meagre resources left in the Amiga world can start pulling in the same direction.

Unfortunately, the people at the head of the current factions are probably both unwilling and incapable of co-operating with each other after so many years of internecine conflict. To be blunt, their minds are too small and their egos too large. This means they may need to be removed from positions of influence, and the only people who can do that are the "rank and file" of their own factions - those people these failed "community leaders" regard as their followers/adherents.

The community as a whole needs to converge and unite their efforts. It can't be imposed by me, by the users of this forum, by the ego of the Friedens or the Ferengi-like interests of Bill Buck. The community must pull together as a whole or continue to die the lingering death it has been doing.
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Offline TheMagicM

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #9 on: December 05, 2006, 06:32:00 PM »
The Amiga community doesnt need any more forums.  There is AWN for Amiga Classic/OS4, MorphZone for MOS and AO for both.  The rest are just a waste of time.

-Alex

PS. I'm going to create a EFIKA forum.  EverythingEFIKA.  EE.net.   All others will be assimilated.  :crazy:
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Offline StarrunnerTopic starter

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #10 on: December 05, 2006, 07:04:38 PM »
Quote

TheMagicM wrote:
The Amiga community doesnt need any more forums.  There is AWN for Amiga Classic/OS4, MorphZone for MOS and AO for both.  The rest are just a waste of time.

-Alex

PS. I'm going to create a EFIKA forum.  EverythingEFIKA.  EE.net.   All others will be assimilated.  :crazy:


The thought was not for a new Amiga forum.  The thought actually was more for us to get together and make something.  Just a thought, more alin to wishful thinking.
 

Offline coldfish

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #11 on: December 06, 2006, 02:40:35 AM »
Like everyone here, I enjoyed my old A500 and my 1200, and still have fond memories of those machines.
 
My memeories of the Amiga are mostly of games, I hardly ever used OS1.3, and by the time I had an A1200 and OS3.1, I also had a PC to do most of the important day-today computer stuff.

When Ainc announced the A1 and OS4 all those years ago, I quickly realised it meant nothing to me, I dont want to use  an AmigaOS everyday and the A1 hardware doesnt inspire the same sense of wonder the A500 did.

So now my interest is probably just one of morbid curiosity.

 

Offline mikrucio

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #12 on: December 06, 2006, 05:49:37 AM »
Everyone get a ps3.
 

Offline Dr_Righteous

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #13 on: December 06, 2006, 05:52:00 AM »
In a way, we sort of HAVE created our own "faction" with the new Amiga clone projects.

But you can put me in the AROS and Classic factions as well.
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Offline Belial6

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Re: A thought on the Future of Amiga
« Reply #14 on: December 06, 2006, 06:15:02 AM »
Quote

AROS (who I think need a colour-camp of their own, I'm always partial to yellow in these situations).


I always just assumed that the AROS color was Black.  Like Kitty.