redrumloa wrote:
Page 27, answer to question 4
Amazing, isn't it? My opinion of Hyperion just went down a couple more notches and it wasn't that high to begin with :-x
Heh. Noticed that quote, but didn't pay attention to the source of it until now. Obviously Hyperion has reason to want to play up OS4's legitimacy, I can barely read it as more than the 'not-so-secret Amiga handshake' wherein anyone negotiating is obliged to demonstrate their grave concern over intellectual property rights, yadda yadda...
That said, any questions of AROS's "legality" would seem to go back to the hazy MorphOS-type questions of who got to see source, when, and why, and
Amiga Inc. are (supposedly) the ones restricting access to the AROS sources for review:
The AROS repository is running on a password protected SVN server, which means that you need to apply for access to it to be able to collaborate in the development. At the request of Amiga Inc., anonymous read-only access to the repository has been disabled.
...so if AInc. is satisfied with that roadblock/has come to such accomodation, and Hyperion never got to see (CBM/H&P) sources in the first place... Well, like I said, standard Amiga business etiquette these days.
