So if it's real, it is not a simulation.
What I mean is that a simulation is something that's real simply because it exists.
No kidding Sherlock. So what are you trying to say? That we should resurrect Commodore Inc. along with it's dead executives before we can have classic re-makes? That's absurd.
No, I'm not saying that at all, and yes, that would be absurd.
The only thing that is going to satisfy you and psxphill would be to find a long-lost hidden cache of classic Amigas (or Amiga components) in some forgotten bomb shelter. News flash, Commodore isn't coming back, nor is the Amiga.
That would be most satisfactory to me, yes. The chance that a large cache of NOS Amigas will be found is of course quites slim, so I'm not counting on it.
Replicas are as good as it will ever get, so get over it.
And that's not good enough for me, only a true hardwired copy would be good enough. I simply see FPGA computers for what they are, FPGA computers, that in and of themselves provide us with a new and interesting alternative computer platform.
More than one FPGA expert in this forum has set you and psxphill straight, but you two insist on spreading dis-information and continue to argue.
I think I have accepted corrections about the technical details, and I have already explained it. The problem was that I was trying to argue a point using technical details thinking it would help. Of course it didn't, and I have already admitted this. How many times must I say that I got that wrong?
My point is about emulation in and of itself and what it can be applied to. For example, can it be applied to software in general? Same question can be asked about FPGAs (and as billt, one of the experts, has said, it's a gray area, and I like to add to that that this makes the question hard to answer).
As for an FPGA computer being an Amiga, it's not, it's an FPGA computer. How difficult is that to see? Then again, people call macs with MorphOS Amigas, hell, people will call peecees with Amiga stickers on them Amigas, while obviously they're not. Why insist on calling something an Amiga while it's not?