I was under the impression we were in the business of re-implementing existing Commodore computers. Not inventing new APIs for which there is no software for. Let the existing Commodore models be the "standard".
I think what he meant was that natami team are making a new CPU, intending to be compatible with 68K but may have something new in it, and that it would be nice if Yaqube's enhancements to TG68 would be compatible with those new things. Have the different groups working together to maintain compatibility between them for all new stuff.
I'm not sure we'll see that happen, and I'm not sure it's completely a bad thing. If everyone is agreeing on everything to be done, then we're waiting for committees to approve anything at all, and we may be losing out on some unique improvements that not everyone on the committee agrees with. Competition can be good for us. It can be uncomfortable and all that, but Hyperion's decisions have left us without any hope for an OS4 laptop, while MorphOS intends to demo one very soon. I wish it would come for an iBook G4 as I already have one of those, but it's more than the Red camp has been willing to allow to happen. (Note that Hyperion is not philosophically against an OS4 laptop, but their rules to get anything done have to date not allowed it to actually come to be. I've tried. If MorphOS on a laptop gives hyperion reason to adjust some of their rules and past decisions, then that might turn out to be a great thing for OS4 fans.)
Besides, if Natami does come up with something cool, if documentation is available then others can reimplement based on that documentation. It'll have to be somewhere. Will they make a nice datasheet? If not, will they use gcc? What ever they use will have to be in gcc sources somewhere... Perhaps not easy to decypher, but there. What about SuperAGA? If they want to see it used, it'll have to have a datasheet. Otherwise it'l be hidden in a P96 or CGX driver, and at that point who cares if it's an extension to AGA or something completely unrelated such as Yacube's P96 graphics thing, which is a parallel block separate from his AGA udpate to Minimig. It could be a simple VGA framebuffer, it could be OpenGraphics, it could be an ARM Mali core, a reimplementation of Voodoo3 from datasheet, whatever, and who cares at that point. (A P96 core would be great, I'm not denying that, but if you're marketing an extension to AGA in particular, then it's not any of these other things which are separate core blocks than AGA) There will of course be some delay in others absorbing whatever information they can find on a new unique feature in one of the various products, then time to reimplement it into their particular product, and for end users to benefit from that, but it is possible.
As I've mentioned in other topics such as the replacement for classic motherboard thread somewhere, if you're reimplementing something, why not add something new and cool to it? Why stop at the 1994 feature set, datasheets, etc? If you're going to all this trouble to make something new, sure, make it compatible so we can run old software on it. The entire point of Minimig and Natami is to make something compatible with our old Amiga software. But, while we're at it, why not add something new, for new software to benefit from? Why not add a P96 graphcis core to Minimig, so that it can run P96 games as well as ECS games? Why not add a PCI slot to Natami, so we can get a much better P96/CGX graphics than what will fit and run inside an FPGA? (I understand that OpenGraphics takes up a LOT of space, and their board has a huge FPGA) If you're going to the trouble to make a new A2000 motherboard, why not add an active 3.3V PCI slot? (like building-in a Mediator or Prometheus to the motherboard itself) If you're making a repalcement for an A4000T motherboard, why not have active PCI slots, plus a bridge to a PCI-Express slot so we can plug in an even newer graphics card? (even if it won't have full PCI-Express connection speed, it will still function) If you're making a new A1200 motherboard, why not add a MiniPCI slot for wireless network and an MXM slot for a modern laptop graphics card? Why not...