Running os4 on ps3 is a fantastic idea. Which is why it will never happen.
The amiga grave robbers won't let people have access to inexpensive fast hardware when they are charging 1000$+ for a 1ghz 10 year old motherboard and processor that was originally manufactured for embedded applications.
Ps3's cost what? 200-300$ bucks used and are VASTLY technically superior in every way to every other os4 machine currently available, including the x1000.
Steven
I want you to go the following links. These are from a few years back. You'll see some with comments (from those in the know) about the PS3 being an Amiga:
http://my.opera.com/community/forums/topic.dml?id=180192http://www.google.com/#sclient=psy-ab&hl=en&lr=&safe=off&prmdo=1&source=hp&q=HRHShawnPendragone+Sony&pbx=1&oq=HRHShawnPendragone+Sony&aq=f&aqi=&aql=&gs_sm=e&gs_upl=42002l42840l2l43034l5l4l0l0l0l0l140l394l2.2l4l0&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.,cf.osb&fp=eeafcb3436656125&biw=1021&bih=656http://www.google.com/#sclient=psy-ab&hl=en&lr=&safe=off&prmdo=1&source=hp&q=Intel+gave+sony+the+right+to%EF%BB%BF+use+the+(amiga)&pbx=1&oq=Intel+gave+sony+the+right+to%EF%BB%BF+use+the+(amiga)&aq=f&aqi=&aql=&gs_sm=e&gs_upl=1628l1628l0l2227l1l1l0l0l0l0l82l82l1l1l0&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.,cf.osb&fp=eeafcb3436656125&biw=1021&bih=656For the second link, look at the comments in the top Youtube link about Sony and Intel.
For the third link, go to Google and just highlight the right arrow (because the user has left). It'll say on the bottom that Sony and Intel signed an NDA agreement at the St Louis show in 2000.
And if you don't believe me (again), go to the Register, to a news item from 2009 where it reports that INTEL is developing the graphics chip for Sony's PS4. >
http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1a050851/intel-design-playstation-gpuNow why the hell is Intel involved with the graphics chip of the PS4 if it's not relevant!?!! Shouldn't it be Nvidia or ATI who should be developing it?
Now that some of you should be curious or at least reasonably convinced, let me explain how I got to know this. How I knew this was true was I followed the comments a while back, (of this guy on Youtube) called Shawn Pendragone and did some of my own research as a result. The above page about ICP-Vortex came from one of my own searches. And I was amazed how it linked back right to Amiga (through the GoldenGate 486 bridge board relation).
Basically the story is what I had said earlier. After Gateway went bankrupt they sold most of their Amiga patents and architectural designs in secret to Intel to cover their losses. Intel, believing they should try to remove a competitor outright bought the Amiga plans from Gateway and had the Amiga IP for a while until they could figure out a way to develop them. Eventually they did - and they found a partner with HP.
So the research of the development of the Amiga architecture split into 2 groups. IA-64 or Itanium (with HP) and the Cell chip with Sony/IBM/Toshiba. Intel had gotten most of their architecture plans from Gateway and the Itanium chip derived most of the designs from this (albeit independently with a fair bit of modification). For Sony, who at the time was looking for a suitable replacement for the PS2, came across Intel, and they signed an NDA with them on the Itanium/Amiga plans (non disclosure agreement) in 2000, which was basically an agreement giving them the architecture plans of the Amiga design (for use in the PS3). For Sony, working with IBM (who was already part of the PowerPC team with Motorola and Apple) this gave them an unprecedented advantage in developing the chipset.
Ask yourself why Sony during that period was able to produce a chipset for their PS3 in such a quick time. Normally architectures and even CPU designs takes a huge amount of time to create and develop - but here was Sony with their PS3, and it did it in less than 5 years….5 years (with a team of over 400 engineers) to integrate their PS2 and come up with a brand new system. That is far less than the engineers they have at Apple! You have to imagine Sony must've had to rely on something so they could work with it. They did, and it was the Itanium/IA-64/Amiga architecture.
This is why in the first generation of PS3s were able to run Linux and other OSes on the PS3 - because it was essentially a (Amiga) computer. In the case of PS3, it can be used with Linux, or Yellow Dog Linux. Because IBM (being part of the Cell group) also has Cell bridge boards you could buy which used to be supplied by Fixstars >
http://www.fixstars.com.
Just to show you the 'proof' of what I'm talking about, here is a Yellow Dog Linux setup running Amiga games really smooth on UAE >
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bEklKwJoyjI