@ Golem!DK nicholas and TakeMeHomeGrandma
I'm not out of touch at all. You asked me when I last "USED" MOS. That implies real work. I last TRIED to use it for real work back in Dec 2008. It wasswitched on last about 2 months ago. I follow Amiga and MOS development daily. Just 2 months ago I tried installing the latest OWB and Netsurf on it. Installing and configuring both was a nightmare and they're still filled with bugs and crash regularly. I don'k like spending hours troubleshooting buggy software. My time is worth more to me than that. Not my idea of fun, so my PegII was switched off again until I see something WORTHWHILE to install on it again.
And you recommend using Google Docs as an app, please, that's pretty insulting. I'd rather use Windows notepad and a legal pad for calculations. And I never said hordes would run out and buy MOS. That will NEVER happen, especially since non-Amigans can't and won't be convinced that MOS is anything other than a toy for geeks. Before non-Amigans will buy it, they have to be convinced that it will do something useful, not just for surfing the web and playing an MP3 or a DVD. There are much better products out there for that and they're much more cost effective and easy to use than MOS. If you like throwing money away on antique hardware, and an overpriced and under supported OS, then sure, buy MOS or OS4. But don't fall into the trap that you're going to generate Documents, Presentations, or manage a business on either OS. Of course the Hyperion/A-Eon and MOS fan boys will argue with me. But if they're so right, why isn't the OS4 and MOS market really growing? Sure, MOS will gain a few more sales because of recent Mac support, but no businessman in his right mind is going to sink good money into an obsolete Mac that even Apple doesn't support any longer.