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Offline JamesRTopic starter

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The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« on: September 24, 2003, 01:32:59 AM »
Amiga Inc. is in danger of insolvency and the Amiga brand again faces uncertainty.

Story by James H. Russell - AO Staff Writer/Editor

Since the demise of Commodore nearly a decade ago, Amiga has had a tumultuous time trying to survive as a computer platform. The ever-shrinking Amiga community has seen owner after owner of the Amiga brand and technologies promise "the second coming" of Amiga only to be rewarded for their loyalty by failed promises, minor technology upgrades, and no significant new products.

A brief history of Amiga Inc.[/i]
The latest owner of the Amiga brand is Amiga Inc., which is headed by Bill McEwen, a former contractor for Amiga Development LLC under Gateway in the late 1990s. Since taking over the Amiga name in January 2000, Amiga Inc. has weathered the brutality of the embittered Amiga community fairly well. To some, it seemed the "curse of Amiga" had finally been lifted. The company's plans for the Amiga Digital Environment (based on Tao's intent real-time operating system) were bold but clever, and the promise to put future Amiga software on any possible device was compelling to say the least.

The key problem many in the community had with Amiga Inc.'s initial plan was an apparent total lack of interest in sustaining and maintaining the Amiga OS as a PC platform. In 2001, Amiga changed its tune and announced that it was outsourcing new Amiga hardware specifications to Eyetech Group, Ltd. and a PPC-native Amiga OS 4 to Hyperion Entertainment, both companies remain profitable to this day selling Amiga products.

For the first two years things seemed to move along fairly well; Amiga had software (the Amiga DE) available for Windows and Linux, and announced deals with major wireless telephone manufacturers - and even Microsoft - for cross-promotional deals. Talk of an IPO excited the community briefly until the company quickly pulled back from an IPO citing the technology market's woes as the reason. The Amiga DE has even gotten as far as CompUSA, where Pocket PC owners can buy the Amiga Entertainment Packs #1 and #2; card with Amiga-branded games on it for their SmartPhones or Windows CE-powered devices.

Signs of Trouble[/i]
Then, last year, the company mysteriously disappeared from its offices in Snoqualmie, Wash., and a year later the property management in charge of the offices auctioned off Amiga's belongings, likely to help pay the debt owed to it by the company.

Many in the community were trepedatious about the auction and what it meant to the company and its future. Bill McEwen reassured the community that Amiga Inc. was not in any trouble, that they had in fact moved to Seattle to be closer to key partners. The nervous community, who had little choice, accepted McEwen's statement.

Many in the community continued to insist that something was wrong - Amiga had already defaulted its customers on a T-shirt promised to purchasers of an AmigaONE coupon pre-sell in 2002 - but Amiga Inc. employees continued to insist vehemently in online forums and at Amiga shows that the company was not in any trouble.

The Litigation[/i]
Recent court documents have surfaced that at last shed light on litigation by former employees and Thendic/Genesi.

Specifically, the court documents state:

* In July 2003, Bill McEwen was scheduled for a deposition in Washington state. His lawyers claimed that he was unable to attend the deposition for health reasons and that he was receiving medical treatment in Montana. Bill Buck of Thendic/Genesi was to attend the first deposition but was unable to attend the reschedule deposition. When asked for specifics, McEwen said only that he was being treated by someone recommended by a “horse riding acquaintance” and would supply no further details.

* Since mid-2001, Amiga Inc. failed to pay employees, paid them late, delivered payment checks that bounced, and without warning to the employees ceased paying insurance premiums. At least one employee accrued thousands of dollars in medical bills that should have been covered by his insurance as a result. Multiple former employees of Amiga Inc. are now suing the company and Bill McEwen for tens of thousands of dollars in back pay; at least one employee has even filed for bankruptcy. In his deposition, McEwen admits that Amiga Inc. has “about a hundred dollars” in its bank account and currently has debts amounting to 2.2 million dollars.

* In November 2000, Amiga Inc. reached an agreement with Thendic Electronic Components (now Thendic/Genesi) to port the Amiga DE OS to a specific list of Thendic devices (including a Windows CE-based device). The contract states that future Thendic devices may be added to this list, but those devices would require the approval of Amiga Inc. to be so added. Pegasos, a PowerPC-based computer that runs an Amiga-compatible operating system and competes with the AmigaONE, did not publicly exist at that time. Thendic/Genesi is now suing Amiga Inc. for breach of contract by failing to port the Amiga DE to Pegasos. The crux of the case will be the legal interpretation of whether or not Amiga unlawfully withheld approval of Pegasos as a new device under that contract.

* Amiga Inc. has filed a countersuit against Thendic/Genesi for "numerous violations of our tradmarks [and] numerous public statements that were false and misleading." When asked what amount Amiga Inc. was asking for, McEwen first joked “fourteen billion dollars... is that too high?” and then admitted that "I don't think we've established a dollar amount."

What's Next for Amiga?[/i]
Trial dates in the documents require that all discovery materials, trial briefs, and trial exhibits must be submitted by November 26th, 2003. Proposed sanctions by Thendic/Genesi’s lawyers require Amiga Inc. to integrate the Amiga DE system into Pegasos or supply source code allowing Thendic/Genesi to integrate the system themselves no later than October 3rd, 2003. It's unclear what Amiga will do in regards to this deadline. A settlement conference is to be held no later than October 2nd, 2003. The trial date is December 1st, 2003.

Obviously, being 2.2 million dollars in debt does not bode well for the future of Amiga Inc. That said, it's not possible to predict the eventual outcome of the litigation or the company's mounting debts.

One hope for a new Amiga computer remains: Amiga Inc. signed agreements with Hyperion and Eyetech that theoretically ensure that they would be able to market and sell Amiga OS 4 and the AmigaONE no matter what happened to Amiga Inc. However, a bankruptcy by Amiga Inc. (should that drastic measure come about) has the potential to change this. In any case, the AmigaONE hardware is shipping now with Linux and a coupon for a free copy of Amiga OS 4 upon its release (Hyperion estimates that Amiga OS 4 for the AmigaONE will be released hopefully in early 2004).

What lies ahead for Amiga Inc. is unclear; certainly the Amiga community, battle-scarred as they are by a decade of failed Amiga revival attempts, will be let down by this news. Unless Amiga is endowed with a significant cash infusion (or is acquired by another company) soon, the future looks grim. To be sure, the community will watch and wait in suspense while the future of the legendary Amiga brand and intellectual property is once again uncertain.

James H. Russell - AO Staff Writer/Editor
James Russell
Editor - Amiga.org...
 

Offline KennyR

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #1 on: September 24, 2003, 01:35:14 AM »
I see a bad moon rising...
 

Offline Lando

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #2 on: September 24, 2003, 01:53:41 AM »
A nice article which explains the current situation very well.  Thanks.
 

Offline Tomas

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #3 on: September 24, 2003, 01:59:25 AM »
Nice article! Though it makes you a bit sad to read...  :cry:
 

Offline redrumloa

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #4 on: September 24, 2003, 02:21:33 AM »
Good article James, well written.
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Offline JoannaK

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #5 on: September 24, 2003, 03:05:04 AM »
Nice, clean and sure to cause a numerous attacs..
 

Offline downix

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #6 on: September 24, 2003, 03:06:18 AM »
*ducks and covers*

Seriously, a well written commentary of the present situation.
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Offline Velcro_SP

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #7 on: September 24, 2003, 03:19:04 AM »
This is good journalism, certainly it is considering that this is a fan website. The Thendic-Amiga lawsuit... IIRC the text of the contract stated that Amiga Inc. would not "unreasonably" withhold Amiga DE from future Thendic devices.  There was nothing in the contract that said the Thendic devices had to run Windows CE.

I would love to see a quote where Bill McEwen explained Amiga Inc.'s getting kicked out of their office was really a planned move "to be closer to key partners."

Again this was a nice article, and of the tenor and tone that needs to characterize amiga.org articles if you people are going to publish a print mag. Good luck, and use recycled paper.
 

Offline Valan

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #8 on: September 24, 2003, 04:08:08 AM »
Well written and explains the situation of Amiga Inc as we have read it on the web.


Quote
... and the Amiga brand again faces uncertainty.

I am not sure that Hyperion, Eyetech and Genesi would agree to the last part and this part seems to be quite misleading.
New hardware and software has been and is being launched for the PPCAmiga brand. Genesi with the MorphOS system has no financial links to Amiga Inc and can still continue the Amiga brand with/without Amiga Inc. Eyetech and Hyperion stopped production because of past uncertainty but now they seem quite comfortable with their ability to continue with the brand without any aid from Amiga Inc.

With a new mag coming out I am a bit suprised Amiga Org writes such a doom and gloom article about the Amiga in general.

Valan
 

Offline System

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #9 on: September 24, 2003, 04:17:42 AM »
I don't know that I consider it "gloom and doom".  For the past 8 years, I've seen my share of both good and bad news related to the Amiga name brand and still it survives, and we go on.  

For the first time that I recall reading an article about the situation, I think James was able to walk a straight-line right down the middle with a straight discussion of the unavoidably grim facts but still pointing out that all is not yet lost.

Besides, I believe the Amiga.org staff by way of it's new magazine is trying to do what they think best to help the community, and the platform as well.  Whether good news or bad, the community needs to know everything that affects this hobby, without crossing the lines one way or another.

I believe they've got a good plan, a good "staff" lined up, and a good chance to establish the magazine as an excellent resource of written Amiga information.

Best of luck.
 

Offline dammy

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #10 on: September 24, 2003, 05:26:03 AM »
Poster: Valan Date: 2003/9/23 23:08:08

Quote
Quote:
... and the Amiga brand again faces uncertainty.

I am not sure that Hyperion, Eyetech and Genesi would agree to the last part and this part seems to be quite misleading.


Eyetech and Hyperion may not like the idea, but if Amiga Inc goes into formal bankruptsy, the IP (Amiga trademark) is up to the highest bidder in order to repay the debts.  The new owner may not want to #### around with Hyperion or Eyetech (or want much heftier royalities).

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Offline Argo

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #11 on: September 24, 2003, 05:40:55 AM »
The courts might not allow for the continuation of the contract but would most likely allow Hyperion to release OS4 to recoup its loses in development. Not doing so, would have the courts put Hyperion in the same boat as Bolton, Fontenue, and other creditors. Hyperion would, at worst, be given limited use of the nessesary Amiga, Inc. IP to finish and market OS4. Doing so would keep Hyperion form being one of the litigating creditors. After that is what would be up in the air as to OS4 development.
This all really depends on how good the contract with Hyperion and Eyetech is. I only know that the business relationship would be allowed to contunue past the bankruptcy so that the business partner could finish the project(s) that are part of the agreement so as to not have the bankrupcy damage the company's business partners. By letting Hyperion and Eyetech's agreements stand, the royalties that they pay would go in to an account controled by the court used to pay the creditors. The object is to not let the situation harm any other entities while trying to rectify the debt of the now defunct company
 

Offline Rodney

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #12 on: September 24, 2003, 05:59:18 AM »
the IT market has picked up a little bit and is continuing to do so. Unfortunatly for Amiga Inc, its not like last time round when any one would throw money at you if you had just any old idea in the IT area.

But fortunatly for Amiga Inc, this time they actualy have products. Amiga Inc have DE apps in stores, and there are more on the way from other companies.

AmigaOS4 is looking good, and with further developments from the A1 the possible markets for AmigaOS and hence Amiga are widening. Although i dont like chances of Amgia Inc getting any more money from anyone, it could happen. Theoriticaly their in a better possition than the were when they first took over the Amiga platform. Despite the lack of money of course :).

I still liked the direction in which AInc had put the platform, it seemed like an obvious progression. Hopfuly, someone else with as much vision as these guys can step in give us a go?

Nice article, well written!
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Offline Korodny

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Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #13 on: September 24, 2003, 06:17:40 AM »
Something like that was certainly neccessary to sum up recent events for people that are not following the news that closely. It's a good read, but I think some more attention to the details would have been neccessary. In its current form, the article is just an easy target for criticism. I'll give some examples below - please note that I'm neither "defending" Amiga Inc. nor am I questioning the article as a whole.

If you're going to do such a detailed report, and you're going to mention the "2.2 million" number several times, wouldn't it also be neccessary to mention that the vast majority of that amount (1.8 million IIRC) are not real debts, but money owed to the company's executive officers (assuming that McEwen tells the truth, but obviously you are ####uming that)? Bill and Fleecy certainly won't sue themselves for outstanding salaries.

Quote

Many in the community were trepedatious about the auction and what it meant to the company and its future. Bill McEwen reassured the community that Amiga Inc. was not in any trouble, that they had in fact moved to Seattle to be closer to key partners.

That's not correct. McEwen did state that they only left their offices to move closer to their partners, but he claimed that nearly a year ago (and not when the auction was announced by the landlord.

Quote

The nervous community, who had little choice, accepted McEwen's statement.

That sounds pretty dramatic - and I'm not even sure if that's a valid conclusion (a lot of people didn't accept McEwens Statement).

Quote

they would be able to market and sell Amiga OS 4 and the AmigaONE no matter what happened to Amiga Inc. However, a bankruptcy by Amiga Inc. (should that drastic measure come about) has the potential to change this.

You should either come up with a detailed explanation (why Amiga Inc. going bancrupt would "have the potential to change this") or you should avoid stating things like that. Asking the involved parties for a statement regarding this matter before posting it would be a good idea too (McEwen won't answer, but Ben Hermans certainly would).
 

Offline Damion

Re: The Downward Spiral of Amiga Incorporated
« Reply #14 on: September 24, 2003, 06:35:27 AM »
Quite an interesting article JamesR, thanks.

BTW, I just read the other day that apparently
both McEwan AND "Fleecy" were sacked by
previous management before they took over??? Is
that true? It could say alot about things ending
up the way they did, it's certainly not
a good sign anyway.