Can't resist my 2 cents here...
yea but too bad:
1> aros has absolutely nothing to do with real amiga's..other than being a native pc wanna be copy.... and now arm aparently.
2> doesn't take advantage of all the existing 68K amiga software out there
3>doesn't run amiga games
4> doesnt run on real amiga hardware(and i don't mean the crap that has boing ball stickers all over it).
5> oddly aros is to be done for the real amiga? what a joke. so a old,real amiga is supposed to run aros apps written for a 3ghz+ pc? yea that will work really fine.
its the same problem now,we have people coding bloatware for 68K amigaos written on a emulator with 32MB chip ram,and crazy speed,so it crawls and is useless for real 68K machines. its contaminating aminets code base.
Aros is just another fork in the road to take amiga developers off real machines that won't be any use to anyone(except people who dont have a clue what an amiga really is).
Without getting everyone on the same page(remember when we all furthered real amiga's along),i dont think there is much hope of getting anywhere if putting licensing and copyright issues aside.You just cant make good progress when you are split in 6+ directions.
-Mech-
You've obviously never used AROS, so let me set the record straight because your comments are just plain wrong.
1. AROS runs Amiga games quite will under emulation.
2. AROS runs most 68K Amiga software just fine, games, office, audio, etc.....
3. AROS has quite a bit to do with "real" Amigas. It uses the exact same programming API that's available under OS3.x, so most 68K Amiga code can be compiled under AROS with little or no modification.
No one is writing applications on AROS for backporting to 68K systems to my knowledge. That would be ridiculous. But plenty of programmers are taking 68K code and compiling it for AROS. And since you like to refer to AROS using absolutes, what Amiga system out there takes advantage of "ALL" 68K software? The answer is simple, none of them. I have quite a bit of classic Amiga software that isn't compatible across all variations of my 68K Amigas.
4. I'd like for you to explain how and why you think AROS is "contaminating" the 68K code base because I don't think you have a clue as to what you're talking about.
5. What "real" machines are you talking about? There are no more "real" 68k Amigas being produced to develop on. And people buying Minimigs use them primarily to run old software, not develop new 68K software. You might find less than 5 programmers world-wide who still develop on a 68K Amiga. And the newer PPC based Amigas are just as alien to the 68K world as an Intel box running AROS, so your arguments sound very lame.
I suggest you actually download and install AROS and use it for a few days before you get on a forum and display your ignorance.