bloodline wrote:
HenryCase wrote:
Zac67 wrote:
There are lots of low cost, high speed available CPUs (well, most of em x86), why not use on of them? While you're at it, add one of the off-the-shelf mobos that don't cost a fortune and are wickedly fast. Obviously you end up where Amithlon started - so I'd rather see a PCIe (or PCI if need be) board sporting an original AGA chipset or a nice vamped up Minimig/Natami/... chipset to get 100% compatibility. Most work (UAE) is already done.
How many f**king times have I got to answer this question. The NatAmi is called such because it is a NATive AMIga. You can have your emulation fun elsewhere, myself (and many others) want beefed up classic hardware, that's what the NatAmi offers. No x86, PPC, ARM, etc... or at least not as the main CPU.
Ok, I have a question... As you will note that Jens at the Breakpoint07 stated... "The Amiga was essentially unchanged for 8 years, If you change anything about the hardware, you create incompatibilities, basically you make a new platform... Why create a new platform... Just buy a Cheap PC?"... While I can see the value in projects like MiniMIG and CloneA, I'm not really sure what NATAMI is really trying to do...
People want the Natami for different reasons, I can only speak about the reasons behind my liking of the Natami project.
One of the best things for me about the Amiga is its architecture. The custom chipsets (OCS/ECS/AGA) working in tandem with the CPU to create a more capable system overall. The PC platform has been moving towards providing the balance in resources we had with the Amiga, but progress on this seems slow (I hope GPGPU tech will take off). The Natami gives us an elegantly designed computer now, because it is based on the elegant design of the Amiga architecture.
Why is this elegance important? Well apart from giving better usage of resources, it is easier to understand from a programming perspective and therefore we should see a high percentage of well written programs on the Natami (less unnecessarily wasteful programs).
That's just from the technical point of view. On the geeky level what's hard about understanding the appeal of a classic Amiga capable of (most) modern computing demands without using any accelerators? That's cool in my book. :-D
I suppose I'm also excited about the Natami because I want to see something close to what the A5000 could have become, so I suppose there's closure reasons too. Of course we'll never know what the A5000 would have been, but the Natami lets us live out our A5000 dream anyway.
There are probably plenty of other reasons, that's just a list off the top of my head.