This is precisely the problem with binary only software. Once a software developer decides to cease support and development , what precisely are you paying for? By opening it up for others to continue developing you are allowing your work to grow , mature and potentially have the support of a community.
The question, at this point, is not what you like or dislike. The point is that Tobias and Alex, at their time, made a particular choice for licensing their product. I believe it is fair to respect this.
Apparently, this already seems to be too much for some people.
What precisely does the license grant you ?
P96 was licensed to hardware developers. Not to end users. It grants access to the SDK of P96 and hence the ability to develop rtg graphics hardware.
If the hardware vendor goes out of business, this grants *you* as end user nothing. But this goes for every hardware, not only computers, does it?
No-one benefits from this , least of all the Amiga community.
What we should be doing is supporting ACTIVE developers and projects that have some sort of long term future.
We know all this though - when the final nails were in the coffin of commodore.
What exactly do you expect? That idiots like me write software for free? I have no problem with "work for money". There were not enough users for a sustainable development, so CBM went bankrupt. To a good degree on their own fault because they simply lost contact to the market and failed to modernize their product.
The OS development continued, but the current developer has decided its better to target high priced PPC hardware for no relevant reason.
Probably for the reason of hoping to make some money? That's a fair deal. Luckily, I never jumped on this particular bandwagon as I did not believe in this market in first place...
The community stepped in - we now have mature alternatives such as AROS, which has been ported to different architectures - and the OS will have a future even if AmigaOS4 development stopped altogether.
This is precisely were we differ. AmigaOs does not have a future. The Os is to a major degree a mis-design not ready for the requirements of at least a half-way decent computer. AmigaOs is a retro-Os for outdated machines - which you use for the joy of it. I would be glad to fix up a couple of loop-holes and bugs, fix the worst problems that are show-stoppers for many users, but that's not "a future".
If you want a "fixed AmigaOs", go get Linux. It does everything AmigaOs did, just better, faster, on modern hardware, and it is Open Source.
There is no problem with closed source software however - but developers should really think hard why they shouldnt open up the code when the doors are closed for the last time.
I've certainly nothing against that and it would be a kind move. It's however not always so easy as the rights are rarely directly at the developers. So for example, if you develop software for a company, and the company goes bankrupt, the software is then owned by the liquidator. The priority is then to pay the debts of the company by selling the software to interested parties, and not to open it up. Or to put it like this: If you invested money in the company, you would also be irritated if the properties of the company would be given away for free instead of returning your investment to you...
However, as it seems, this is not the case for P96. The software is, as far as I read it, solely owned by Tobias and Alex, so my hope is not lost.