"To get that content, Amiga was relying on the Amiga developers. The Amiga developers, in turn, were relying on having OS 4.2 with DE on it because they only want to develop using new Amiga computers."
Okay. So, there were a limited amount of machines that don't exist with OS4 and OS4 SDKs out there. Amiga Inc. surely had at least one of these motherboards running OS4 and had access to the SDK from Hyperion. The OS as released in the developer pre-release must have been enough to develop the DE SDK for it, otherwise there would have to be a variation in the contract for Hyperion to develop the missing functionality, yes?
And where were these new Amiga computers? The A1s that weren't authorised to exist from the company who bailed Amiga Inc. out got discontinued due to Amiga's inaction. Those that did exist are still running an ever-improving OS4 which still DOES NOT HAVE A DE SDK on it.
You CANNOT blame the 'lack' of DE SDK sales on a lack of OS4. The DE SDK, like DE itself, is designed to work on multiple architectures. Why hasn't the mobile phone industry gone bankrupt? Surely their multimedia content is produced by ex-Amiga enthusiasts (or the companies that bought ex-Amiga talent to port ex-Amiga games to the Java platform).
I will continue reading the document, but Amiga Inc. cannot seriously believe, even though they assert, that their DE business failed because of a third party whose hands they appear to have quite erroneously tied, can they? They had EVERY opportunity to develop and release the DE SDK for the OS4 platform, which would have solidified commitment from hardware manufacturers to produce mainstream computing systems for said environment.
Also, they stated in no uncertain terms after buying Gateway's assets that they are a SOFTWARE company. They seem to want to appear to be a hardware company again...
jaminJay
"I'll read into this whatever it appears to be saying."