« Reply #143 on: October 31, 2013, 01:45:38 AM »
Naming or rather Branding something is not the same as referring to something.
A large portion of the user base referred to the OS as Workbench. It was the clearest and most visible labelling of the OS for most users.
Commodore/Amiga referred to the operating system (OS) for the Amiga as OS n.n If you look at the box it is clear that it is named OS 3.1 and is intended for the AMIGA line of computers.
AMIGA
OS 3.1
not
Amiga OS
3.1
The brand and the trademark was AMIGA. Branding the OS was not part of Commodore business practices, and for that matter was not part of the business practice of most computer hardware manufactures, e.g. Apple never branded the System OS.
I see the move to brand the Amiga OS as "Amiga OS" in the late '90s as a direct response to Apple branding their System OS as "Mac OS" when they launched the new iMac with Mac OS 8.
What I did like is that Apple embraced the popular and endearing term for Macintosh computers; Mac. I have held the opinion since then to this very day that Escom/AT and/or Gateway/Amiga Inc. should have embraced "Workbench" as the OS branding. I know it's only a portion of the overall OS suite, but it's what most of us called it anyway.
And BTW, it's not like they were going to make Amiga OS an independent product that could run on other systems, like Schmyperion does.
« Last Edit: October 31, 2013, 01:48:40 AM by agami »

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