@Beast96GT
>The Amiga would need some kind of "niche" to fill that's not being currently exploited.
Every business writing, even the get rich ones, say to find a niche market. I completely agree. My idea of the niche market is an inexpensive computer that is extremely simple and comes (out of the box) with software needed for such market.
>I would like to think that the new Amiga would have an architecture that would not be held back by backward compatibility, as the PC seems to be. Why couldn't backward compatibility be provided in software emulation?
The JIT emulation is find, IMO. A new system needs to be engineered with current new ideas for system architectures. The catch would be a bridge system between current architectures and the future system. I thought Amiga's AmigaOS5 was a good idea until they decided to have it basically like a Java OS atop another OS; then you're competing with Sun--not a good idea, and why would someone buy an OS that requires the extra expense of an underlying OS. It's a bad idea, IMO. AmigaOS5 should have been AmigaOS4 but on x86--or even just on a modern PPC system.
>On more realistic note, however, I think Hyperion has the right idea. An OS would seem to be the most logical way to promote the Amiga despite the hardware it runs on.
I agree. I would like to know the underlying reasons why Amiga canceled the contract. I would also like to know if someone presented investment capital to Amiga to further develop AmigaOS4 if they would be interested. I think Amiga is going down the same deadend path that Be, Inc went when they decided to try the Internet Appliance market; it's the same market, but just named differently now.
>In the end, of course, it's a pipe dream, but it's still fun to discuss. And I think it's good to bring it up, regardless of critics that think it's pointless.
Without the dream though, new technologies and innovations would not be developed. Many new technologies are born atop previous technologies, and Windows is the perfect example--as MS typically copies rather than innovates.
The dream needs a focus and a niche, and, IMO, further AmigaOS4 development on existing modern PPC hardware is the first step with a port to x86 as the step thereafter. Money should be spent on developing (or acquiring) a good software suite for the PPC AOS4 before spending resources on porting.
Along that line, is there even an IDE available for AmigaOS development? Is StormC even still being updated or available? I recall SASC, but is it even still available? Are there any decent development tools for AmigaOS3.9 or 4.0?