the_leander wrote:
Hans_ wrote:
The different visions are exactly why people are tearing at each other. I wish that everyone would move to Amiga OS 4 (ignore the hardware availability issues for a second please)
No, that's at best disingenous. The reason OS4 is dead is that the hardware it was designed to run on was a pile of cack even when it was available.
Yes, it was faster, but it has an attrition rate higher then that of the original Amigas it was trying to replace!
Disingenuous? In what way is anything that I said disingenuous? I simply stated my personal preference. The comment in brackets is because I know that it's kind of hard to get OS4 if you don't already have a PowerPC classic Amiga or an Amigaone.
BTW, I have one of those "piles of cack" (sic) that you speak of, and for a "pile of cack," it works pretty darn well. You clearly have no idea what state OS4 is in, or the hardware.
You can disagree with me if you wish, but suggesting that I am being disingenuous is plain stupid. Nothing I said is wrong; some want OS4, others want MOS, or AROS, or just the classic OS.
Hans_ wrote:
there's also a group that want Amiga to remain a retro machine.
There is a good reason for this too, those of us who wish this realise the gap between what the Amiga in it's heyday was able to offer, and what is out there now is too great a gap to bridge, you may as well start from scratch at this point.
And? I didn't say anything negative about the retro crowd. I simply listed it as another position. If people want to stick with their A500s and A1200s, etc., that's fine by me.
Hans_ wrote:
What would be neat is if a next-gen API could be collectively agreed upon, and then implemented on all the next-gen Amiga systems. That is, however, unlikely to happen.
It's also unfeasable to push a single user, non memory protected, non smp capable OS into a new device without starting from scratch, simply adding an new API won't cut it.
Wrong. It's not
adding an API, it's creating/using a
new API. The new API would be incompatible with the old one, so old software would run in a legacy environment. Apple did it with Mac OS X, so it can be done. Except, with Amiga OS, the difference between the two APIs needn't be so drastic. Just because you don't know how to do it doesn't make it unfeasible.
The best you could possibly hope for is some heavily patched beast running on something like an EeePC or mini itx board, because anything else would litterally be wasted on AmigaOS - it simply isn't capable of utilising anything more complex or capable.
That's the best that
you could hope for, not everyone else. There is no technical reason why Amiga OS could not utilise something more complex or capable.
BTW, no, I do not expect Amiga OS to suddenly catch up to the rest of the computing world; I just happen to enjoy pushing it forward beyond what it was originally designed for. That's pretty similar to the Natami guys, who are pushing the original hardware design forward, instead of the OS. I think that the Natami project is pretty neat.
Hans