At that point co-operative multitasking vs pre-emptive multitasking becomes a difficult argument as well.
In theory, yes.
But in practice, the Amiga applications in general behaved fairly well and the "end user" experience was pretty darn good.
Especially compared to the co-operative options at the time.
Both co-operative and non-memory protected pre-emptive multitasking required the apps to behave.
In general they did.
Yes, you had issues from time to time, but you could ID the bad apps pretty easily.
The fact is, all the early OSes crashed from time to time.
Multitasking or not.
Pre-emptive multitasking was a huge performance / functional benefit that, in reality, wasn't any less stable that the other options.
(With the exception of the Mac and multi-finder, which was pretty darn stable, but slow and painful, IMHO)
I used many of the options available at the time, and the Amiga wasn't any less stable, and was (IMHO) much more usable.
desiv