At the end of the day, stick your average PC user in front of: Amiga OS, Linux, Windows, Mac.
Chances are they will figure out how to get on the Internet on the latter three, but stand no chance at all on the Amiga. Mainly because they would be lucky if they even had a TCP/IP stack on it.
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That's a biased comparison. Internet browsers and websites mainly developed after Amigas stopped manufacturing. They revised Windows many times to integrate internet and it's bloated websites into it. I bet if internet was a big thing during Amiga's development, people would have had optimized browsers running on it within its RAM/processor limits. People develop and optimize for what the target machine is.
>Come on, lets be realistic. The point here is, that for the vast majority of user a PC does exactly what they need it to do. This might mean it can't do a few things the Amiga could do, mainly because they are things your average user does not need to do.
It's a speculation to say Amiga only does those things PC cannot do that average user does not need to do so. Many people use PCs today for painting, gaming, etc. can do the same on Amiga.
>The PC is a mainstream "do it all" machine, it makes no sense wasting time and money including backwards compatibility, except wheres its absolutely essential.
It's absolutely necessary to maintain backward compatibility-- they do it on APi level and I was proposing they do it at hardware level so a programmer can have the best of both worlds.
>That is why they removed 16bit support from Windows some time back, it was no longer useful and just added bloat, bugs and more importantly a LOT of time wasted for the development team making sure it was still compatible with all the new stuff.
16-bit support is NOT bloated. The entire Windows 3.1 OS fits in 1Megabyte. Compare this with some application on XP where one of the hundreds of DLLs it uses is 1 Megabyte each. By the way, the processors still support backward compatibility of 8-bit and 16-bit; it's stupidity not to include it within the latest OS.
>As we said before, why bother including support for the PC to be able to do stuff that 99.9% of the userbase do not need, and can easily be done on custom hardware more efficiently? If the Amiga is better at this than a modern PC then excellent, but it also proves the point that it would make no sense using a PC to do it. Why would you want to use a Ghz CPU eating around 150W of juice, to do something that a custom board could probably do in 10W?
Custom board would have to be put into a PC as well right so the wattage would add up. Someone can make the same argument Amiga can do everything and just needs a custom board for dealing with bloated internet websites/applications.