Thanks for taking the time out to give us your opinions on OpenAmiga.
I didn't give an opinion about it. I like the idea, but I think it is not going to work unless you settle for the smallest common featureset. This means that you neiter use AROS nor MorphOS nor AmigaOS to the extend that it could be used.
Sure, for some things it is going to work, but the Reaction <->MUI example is already a case where you run into trouble. Sure you could argue to use MUI in both cases since it is available for both, but what if certain components are only available for MorphOS (AFAIK the MorphOS developers don't need to merge with the general code anymore, meaning that OS 4 has no access to their modifications).
The feature list on the web site indicates the "smallest common subset" thing already.
(I wonder though why it needs to specify the executable format; with a certain certainity, a MorphOS ELF file will not run on AmigaOS, and an AmigaOS ELF file will not run on AROS. )
As you have said, these standards don't pose any threat to anyone.
No, I never claimed otherwise (It was Wayne that did claim Hyperion would). As I stated before, I am all for open standards - another reason why we have XML services integrated into AmigaOS. Of course I don't speak on behalf of Amiga or Hyperion officially.
I wish those behind the effort best of luck. When AmigaOS 4 is done, all documentation for it will be available, and people will be free to use it to produce software for AmigaOS 4. I don't have a problem with the same software running under MorphOS or AROS (in fact while Hyperion never officially supported anything but AmigaOS, we did likewise not build anything into our programs to prevent them from running under MorphOS or Amithlon).
However, please also understand that we're not going to hold back with implementing new API's and system components for compatibility's sake. If we think that it will bring the platform forward, we'll go ahead and do it,