I've seen the term been misused before on other things, but at least with a Linux-based PC it is still relevant (as its computing). But God forbid the day we get Amiga tampons! That'll really be the end of the world....
But what's the difference, really? If
anything computing-related counts as "Amiga," then the name is still watered-down to the point of uselessness. By that logic, you could have "Amiga" Macintoshes, "Amiga" programmable calculators, or "Amiga" software-as-a-service web platforms. If that's how it work, is it
really such a great difference between "Amiga = computer thing" and "Amiga = thing?" You might as
well have branded hygiene products.
Well if you're talking about sacrifice, the ultimate sacrifice had already been made when Commodore International had gone bankrupt. Most of the loyal fanbase had lost everything when the parent company went under - we lost everything then. Talent, money, knowledge - everything that was C=. What we're trying to do now (in CUSA's case) is not 'resurrect' the old 16-bit platform per se, but to start off with a completely new sheet. Since everything's been so convuluted anyways, we might as well start off with a clean-sheet right (as Wolf To The Moon says)?
But what's the point? CUSA employs nobody that made CBM or Amiga what they were, nobody even remotely comparable in knowledge or vision, has no interest in doing any of the things Commodore did, and to any outside observer seems basically to be in the biz to sell overpriced same-old to desperate retro-obsessives. If you're going to "start off with a clean sheet," you could at least have the decency to not
pretend you're following up on something entirely different.
In this sense (in CUSA's case - I'm not talking about anyone else) it is 'doing things in the spirit of Commodore and Amiga' which was doing it creatively, imaginatively and powerfully.
But they're
not. They're not creative - they haven't created anything. They've reproduced a case, bulk-purchased existing boards, slapped the two together, and stuck a re-paletted Linux Mint on it. The only thing differentiating a C64x from any other ITX board in a C64 case running Linux is that it shows a chickenhead on boot, which is just a tweak on a feature a lot of BIOSes already have.
They're not imaginative, either - Barry's "vision" as stated thus far consists solely of riding the "overpriced retro-packaged Linux box" horse until its legs fall off. The
real Commodore went from calculators to PET to VIC to C64 to Amiga in
under a decade - Barry's line of two PC clones and plans for a third doesn't come within a
light-year of comparison.
And they're not all that powerful, either - certainly not for that kind of money. So they've got an i7 board in it now - big freakin' deal, you can put together your own i7 system for a lot less, and put it in a better-cooled case while you're at it. Hell, you can
buy i7
laptops now.
as former Amiga users we are tired of Windows and tired of OSX/Macs/Apple revisionism. We just want something else 'different' on the market, something that will still give us that nostalgic feeling but still allow us to run the latest and greatest stuff, primarily games and creative stuff.
There's nothing nostalgic about Mint. There just
isn't. I mean, if it shipped with a stripped-down System-V-clone distro that displayed amber text on a terminal emulator and didn't know what X even was, that wouldn't be
good, but it could at least conceivably be claimed to be "nostalgic."
It's still performance driven and modern, but with a unique character that is 'Amiga'.
But it
isn't. It doesn't work like an Amiga, it doesn't play like an Amiga, it doesn't feel like an Amiga, it doesn't have anything Amiga-like under the hood, it doesn't have anything Amiga-like in the bare metal, it has
nothing at all in common with anything that forms any part of any basic consensus of what "Amiga" is. Even if you feel that there's some undefinable "character" that makes the Amiga,
Linux does. Not. Have. It. It is its own separate thing, with its own separate merits, but
it is not Amiga.EXACTLY....backed by industry titans. And you can't do with without a powerful, affordable and adaptable architecture. At the moment it seems, nothing can touch x86 right now in terms of bang for buck or platform support. Just look at how many copies of Battlefield 3 got shifted recently.....8 million copies!
Uh...
Battlefield 3 is not x86-exclusive, it runs on the 360 and PS3. In any case, x86 was established
long before it actually got
good, back in the bad old days of 640KB conventional memory, labyrinthine ISA configuration, and segment registers. I'm not saying it doesn't have its merits
now, I'm saying that it didn't get where it was by being the best.
Perhaps then FreeBSD should re-evaluate their position? But I certainly know NetBSD could be a contender because it can read AmigaOS files natively. POSIX support is important for a better OS for Amiga I agree...
Any Linux distro can read Amiga files natively, it's right there in the kernel build options and easily done through FUSE even if it's not compiled in. Hell,
Windows can read Amiga filesystems with some finagling. And what would you mean by FreeBSD "re-evaluating their position?" They could ship some non-X environment, but all that would mean is a lot of work building an X compatibility layer. X apps would still be poorly designed by people who know nothing about good UI. Unix technology isn't (most of) the problem, it's Unix
culture.Yes, but not when you include iOS as part of the make-up. The potential for Apple to utilise this as an underpinning is huge...just look at how the new iOS5 update has 'freed' people from their computers when updating their phones/iPads.
I thought we weren't counting phones/tablets? I certainly wouldn't, they're even less of an either/or proposition than computers. Lots of people have a Windows machine and an iPhone or iPad.
I think there's a lot more potential for Amiga to develop even further now as a new system than ever before. Just look at Aros' latest posting. They are now supporting Nvidia's Fermi cards right out of the box! Now that's what we need to revitalise the brand and userbase....
Yeah, no argument there. But that's kind of
exactly my point - projects like AROS and MorphOS are actively developed, support newer, more powerful, more available hardware, and are
still infinitely closer to being "Amiga" than a PC running Linux with a sticker on the box.