So the owner of Amiga.org has finally revealed his identity, despite personally thinking it probably isn't important and that the only thing of importance was to save the site when Wayne was ready to throw the towel in(?).
He has also stated he is quite a private person in the recent ART 53 episode.
I login for the first time in ages and there is already a whole load of accusations about why his name was removed minutes after the post about ART 53, with the worst possible reasons being assumed without any basis in fact. Clearly in hindsight we can all agree that was done to allow us to enjoy a little bit of the suspense for the first 7 minutes of the show!
Now this sort of attitude and bickering between us all WILL destroy the community, so I am asking you all to think about what you post here and not just let things degenerate into the sort of trigger happy posting negative forums like the old Counter Strike or Need For Speed forums.
Clearly we are all here because we still have affection for this machine, whether we choose to keep the dream going by running an emulator, buying hardware to run AROS/MOS/OS4, waiting for NATAMI or REPLAY etc or even just keeping an old Amiga from the 80s/90s still working should not matter.
OK I admit it is tempting to shun Commodore USA products for various reasons (behaviour of Altman, their track record, veiled AIO PC with emulator not a real Amiga argument etc etc) BUT the important thing is when we disagree we should just make our opinion or supporting facts known in such threads to show our objection/alternative mindset in a respectful manner.
There are too few of us left who still do anything Amiga related in the grand scheme of things, we are getting crushed under the wheels of the pathetic Microsoft juggernaut of bloatware which will never cease and is forever eroding the memory of true genius and elegance in both OS and hardware design that is Amiga.
Try and enjoy each others company, share our wealth of collective knowledge from an absurdly wide ranging scope and just try and keep this place something to be proud of.
Ted has told you his name now (not that the name actually rings any bells with me anyway), so we can now move on and just enjoy ALL things Amiga, and where we don't agree have civil discussions about differences with positive outcomes to improve things for ALL Amiga fans from whatever camp they have now ended up in since the demise of Commodore in 1994.
I for one would also like to thank Ted for not only keeping this site alive but also for the distinct lack of overt in your face advertising on a website that can achieve 100gb a month of traffic.