Joking aside, what I was getting at, and I do have the linux zealot hat on here for a moment, is that in a market where the two mainstream options (windows and os x) are basically locked down ecosystems with very little possibility for user input, complaining that Linux is the choice of the unimaginative and lazy seems very weird to me.
Well, if you compare it to settling for Windows or OSX, I suppose that's true, but I don't know of anybody who does that; people who want a Windows box just buy a Windows box. Whereas Linux
is basically the inevitable, omnipresent fallback OS for pretty much any 32-bit hardware project that isn't x86, which is I think where the perception comes from.
(Again, it also has to do with that class of Linux users who think that every OS secretly wants to be Linux and spend their time kibitzing around places like the Haiku forums and perpetually suggesting that it become less like the OS it intends to be like and more like the OS
they think it should be. It's easy to see Linux as a sort of ominous, all-engulfing Borg project when you get stuck in a conversation with these people for too long.)
In the end though, I think there's sort of two different things at stake here.
1: What the hobby community is doing right now
2: Theoretical ideas of how to get a sort of Amiga experience that has any resemblance to the success of the 80's and 90's.
Im not sure those two points converge at all. Of course, maybe they don't have to.
I don't think they have to, which is where I differ from a lot of people in the community. I'm all for improving the Amiga experience, but I really don't get and don't at all agree with the notion that this is
so important that it means it's worthwhile to abandon anything and everything that made the Amiga interesting in pursuit of it.