+1 one partly to who ever said first "why discuss something that will never happen".
There is a deep mistrust between AOS4 and the MOS camp. Bring up the name Ben Hermans and see how the flame wars start... Just reread this thread and you can feel the palpable distain between the two different "camps" world view of who are in the right and who are in the wrong...
Even after all these years and all of the lost opportunities.
Yes, it would make sense. Yes it would be better to work together to pull coding resources towards common push forwards. But itx sums it ups quite succinctly, there is only one API that MOS and AOS4 have in common AHI. The rest they went there separate was, not only on the apprehension of reality, but on P96 vs CGX, MUI vs Reaction etc... At every turn they parted ways...
And all through this thread everyone has more or less argued the virtue one over the other, all rejecting the reality today that Intel compatible processors being from Intel or AMD are the only real alternatives today for end users for affordable hardware. And still no one has mentioned AROS???
Yes the MOS people can bash the AOS4 crowd over the head every time with the "low price" of second hand Apple Mac hardware in every argument when ones virtu is discussed over the other. But that doesn't change the fact that MOS compatible hardware isn't made anymore, and that the MOS capable hardware is getting rarer every day that passes and that more and more sellers are getting wise to it's value due to the prices middle aged amigians are willing to pay for it. So yes it's cheaper, but for what you get it's still expensive.
A unified next gen Amiga effort between AOS4, MOS and AROS would be nice. John Lennon Imagine fantastic even if it was for X86-64 processors. Heck, I'd even cheer for an ARM implementation!
What we need to do as Amiga users is to tell the application developers is to be multi platform. To try to be as "3.1 API" compatible as possible, and to deliver targets to AOS3.x, AOS4, MOS and AROS. It's a terrible cost, and it's holding us back...
But you can't ask me to pick one favorite.
I had the beta of AOS4 on classic. I have MOS on the Efika. I have OS3.x on classic. I have AROS on virtualization.
I love(d) them all. Most of them I still love.
But I can't say that one is more deserving than another to live on. And I know that I can't ask them to unify, as I know the people involved are too entrenched and have too much baggage with each other.
MOS will never have the speed or performance of AROS.
AROS will never have the compatibility of MOS. And I don't know AOS4 well enough to know what will be lacking there. But I'm sure I wouldn't be fully satisfied with it either...
And whats missing from my rant? Well, Amithlon. Another way the Amiga legend could have evolved...
Despite this rant, I have accepted where the Amiga legacy is now. It's fractured, but still living on.
MOS guys seem to be mostly focused on bringing it to new PPC hardware.
AOS4 devs seem to be slowly evolving (emphasis on slow) and only doing "new" hardware (new in quotes, as with the speed it's evolving, the hardware is old as new "payable" releases are done).
AROS guys are doing the "current" fad (with the exception of Toni Wilen who were doing a 68k version)
And Amithlon was killed off in a lawsuit (or threat of one) and never evolved at all...
So why focus on the OS devs? Focus on the app devs, and make sure they understand well were the users are. Tell them that they are "all over the place", tell them that you want to use your software key on AOS3.x and MOS, or on AROS and OS4 or what ever combo of amiga like OS's...
The guys now into MOS/AOS4/AROS or boing ball development are doing a great job. And people who are putting money into it like Amigakit and Trevor are doing obvious love affairs with their nostalgia. Thank you and kudos for that.
But it'll "dry up" without content. And for an operating system that means software.
Amistore has been mentioned here. That is a golden opportunity for the amiga community and the players to show that they want to build an Amiga ecosystem. Make it work and be available on AOS3.x, AOS4, MOS and AROS. It could be a great service to those who create amiga based software. Aminet was like this. All amiga based software was/is welcome. The user sees the software clearly annotated with what will it work with. It was a great platform for software developers to reach a huge user base back in the day. Amistore should first and foremost be for the developers. Then the users will come. When the developers are motivated and rewarded for putting their software there.
Just imagine Andreas Falkenhahn having one listing there for Hollywood, available on all amiga based platform, "one buy it now button" for all his versions of Hollywood. One button to rule all versions of all the four platforms...
Then, with that in place. Maybe the OS devs would be motivated down the road to harmonize and collaborate...
I apologise for the long rant...