HyperionMP wrote:
Seehund, if you want to use quotation marks, at least get the quote right.
All I said was that Hyperion does not have the distribution infrastructure to distribute a significant amount of OS copies.
As I said; "to paraphrase from memory it was something along the lines of ..."
The
exact quote would be:
"We don't want to be involved in shipping end-user copies to dealers for several reasons:
1. This would put a strain on us as we would need to put into place an infrastructure for shipping, warehousing and distribution which goes beyond what we have now for selling our games."And
I've replied to that before:
(So AInc is supposed to do NOTHING but get payed for a license of their(?) IP to Hyperion? What a wonderful deal...)
If you expect to sell that many separate copies that you'd need further investments in infrastructure, I say
GO FOR IT[/size] damn it! :-O
Especially considering that you won't get any relevant hardware vendors to apply for a distribution license.
Don't be
afraid of success, and AInc shouldn't do everything to
prevent success.
We are a development company, not a distributor or dealer with warehousing facilities.
Which is why we are shifting the distribution to other parties via an OEM arrangement.
Heh, I suppose that's one way of putting it.
Another way could be "people won't be allowed to buy the same hardware from anyone they like, and the OS must be actively prevented from being ported to better, cheaper and more widespread hardware, because the OS developers don't have enough shelves in their offices." It sounds equally silly.
If you (or AInc, or Eyetech...) honestly say no to that vast number of OS sales you're hinting at because you don't expect to be able to handle distribution, then the obvious solution IMO wouldn't really be to RESTRICT SALES. It would be to let others handle distribution of those separately sold copies (or to use some of the increased income to improve one's own distribution).
This OEM arrangement also guarantees us that we are exposed only to the credit risks associated with the OEM, not to countless dealers all over the world.
So? It's the exact same thing as choosing a distributor for additional
shrinkwrapped copies of your product.
It also allows us to negotiate more favorable shipping conditions if we can have all copies sent over to the same location.
See the paragraph above. Plus, motherboards are more expensive to ship than boxes with a CD and a booklet in them, or sending ISO images and PDF files to printers/distributors. And then the irrelevant hardware distribution costs don't affect the cost of your product, AmigaOS.
But, really,
shipping costs?! I haven't even heard anyone from AInc bringing up things like that to justify compulsory licensing/bundling/dongling of hardware.
It also helps to cut down on piracy.
I
still don't understand how anyone can claim that.
So, under the currently presented policies, what if not even one single "unlicensed" piece of hardware ran a pirated copy of AmigaOS (which of course is a utopia)? It still means that not a single shrinkwrapped copy of AmigaOS can be bought and payed for. Not even a hypothetical gain.
Your point being? Mac hardware is branded uniquely Apple through its design.
Yes, and? Does that brand stop other OSes from running on it or being sold for it? I could swear I bought YDL for that Powerbook over there, and I could swear that the US Navy recently bought new Apple XServes with Black Lab on them.
The Amiga hardware concept is fortunately dead and buried. There's no "Amiga hardware market", for no good reason at all, based only on a brand. Oh, wait... Scratch that.

My point is that there's lots of suitable hardware already out there, and there will always be coming new hardware, but with the licensing/dongling/bundling-only policy, AInc has turned down any and all of those options for AmigaOS. AmigaOS is stuck with only licensed hardware from licensed vendors, and for any forseeable future that means Eyetech and apparently whatever hardware they can buy.
Moreover, this would require us to support this hardware with drivers for the onboard hardware which would effectively see us wade through LinuxPPC source-code as Apple certainly won't release chipset documentation to us.
Yes, that's pretty obvious. Hardware needs drivers, no matter if somebody's got a license to sell that hardware using the "Amiga" name or not. Should sales of separate OS copies be allowed, then either you or a third party could write those drivers, and they could be distributed with the OS or by the third party. Should the compulsory hardware trademark licensing stay in place, then there's no point for anyone to even consider writing drivers anyway, unless a hardware licensee appears.
All of this for a completely uncertain return.
Voodoo economics at its best.
Perhaps the "market research" method employed by AInc to decide that the max return/investment ratio from AmigaOS is gained by only making it available for and sold together with Teron motherboards distributed by Eyetech could fit in here somewhere. The insane lottery / unspecified surprise preorder / corporate fanclub membership thing.
>There are probably 3 - 10 times as many people who publicly >protest against the restrictions imposed on AmigaOS and its >hardware base as there are current Teron board users.
Pure speculation on your part. You have no numbers to back up this claim.
There are about 1000 protestors. My speculation was about the number of Terons in use by Eyetech customers today. You now say that this number is more than 600. Perhaps you could provide a more useful number? And what factual numbers - not "pure speculation", of course - did AInc use when they imposed the restrictions on
all future versions of AmigaOS?
>There's probably twice the amount of discontinued Pegasos >1s out there, with a new model around the corner,
Nonsense. No more than 600 Pegasos I units were ever produced and the AmigaOne sales have already overtaken that number since quite some time.
While we're juggling numbers in the hundreds range and ignoring the essence, how many licensed Teron CX's were in use by Eyetech customers when it was chosen as the only hardware platform (apart from Amigas) for AmigaOS, and how many were speculated... sorry... expected to be sold? How many were delivered by Eyetech before they saw it being discontinued?
Moreover, I doubt very much that a sufficient number of those people would be willing to buy a copy of OS 4 to merit the development costs.
(Is this where I accuse the poster of "pure speculation", while not providing any disproving numbers?

)
It'd be very interesting if you could please tell us what kind of minimum profit you require to support a piece of hardware, and what you think those numbers are for some often discussed hardware, like the Teron CX and PX, the Pegasos I, or a common Mac like a new PBG4.
You are talking about a discontinued product and a product which only exists in the form of an announcement.
If you think I'm going to bet the shop on that kind of nonsense, dream on.
I do NOT think you should do that. They're just options. Or rather, they could be options, if the current licensing/bundling/dongling wasn't compulsory.
But somebody's betting the shop for you and AmigaOS already, it seems.
A discontinued product? Teron CX. It was ageing fast already at its release in 2001, and later when it was presented as "AmigaOne SE". As the PX is basically the same product but with newer CPUs, it's not very speculative to say that it's not going to last for very much longer.
A product that only exist in the form of an announcement? I remember Alan Redhouse announcing the forthcoming smaller Terons already as "AmigaOnes" (i.e. they're supposedly licensed hardware that has passed AIncs rigorous testing with AmigaOS...), at Amiwest.
The thing is, your software and your shop has been bet on this hardware and this dealer. There can be no options. A totally unnecessary and scaringly counterproductive additional dependency for you and AmigaOS, IMO.
You lack key data such as:
1. development cost of OS 4
Since you separated this from point 3 in your list, this is irrelevant. It is developed (well, in development), and further sales can be nothing but good.
2. per unit license fee to Amiga
As a curiosity, it'd be fun to know what this is, since you felt like mentioning it in the first place. But the fact that it exists at all is of course bad, since it works against the plan that AmigaOS is made dependent upon: getting more licensees. And since you say "Amiga" [Inc.], am I wrong in presuming that this trademark tax would not be funneled back to you and AmigaOS development?
3. cost to support an additional platform
That's what counts of these points. And, since you'd presumably not make the port solely for ####s and giggles: 3b. Possible extra profit, a wider potential hardware install base and a more attractive AmigaOS from supporting (or allowing others to support) more platforms regardless of hardware vendor license status.
As you point out all of us here except you lack key data like point 3, so could you please share that information? I think it was Steffen Häuser that said thanks to the HAL, porting would generally be a matter of a couple of weeks. No, I don't think a specific platform was mentioned (input from MagicSN appreciated!). If we use the Pegasos I solely for sake of example, how many copies would need to be sold to recoup the cost?