Karlos wrote:
I think Rogue meant that phrases like "commited red users" are inflamatory, no matter what your intended meaning. Someone will invariably start another red v blue flamefest.
Someone like that will start one no matter what is said, or the meaning behind it. If we moderate everything we say for the sake of not offending anyone or not offering any remote opportunity for the trolls to pick up on, then there will be nothing to discuss at all.
And seriously, who can be ars*d with another one of those?
Not me. I'd have to point out that flamefests are not only started by trolls, but also by those who seek to take offense at every opportunity. I know certain people will
always take offense at something I say, because they choose to interpret it that way no matter how I intend it.
If an AOS4 port was made, based on reaction, sure it would be AOS4 only. If a port was made to MUI it would be MOS (and probably with some tweaks AROS) compatible. If a zune port were made then it could be made cross platform.
People will argue each way about the best route to take, missing the point that it doesn't actually matter. If someone did an AOS4/Reaction based one, you can bet someone else would soon get to work a Zune/MUI version so as not to be left behind.
Possibly, but that's pure speculation.
For all their technical differences, MUI/Zune and Reaction fundamentally similar enough for a code rework from one port to the other, as long as the initial port doesn't go totally out of it's way to be badly written and keep dependencies where they belong.
Well, if you port something purely for the benefit of one platform, there is no reason to expect host API dependencies to be kept to a minimum.
As long as these ports support a common set of the GTK standard, what difference does it actually make? A GTK app recompiled for AOS4 ends up using reaction, the same source recompiled for AROS or MOS uses Zune. Do we care, as long as the ability to port that software exists?
Yes, except that those ports don't exist, and only one is even being planned. Until that changes, there is no way GTK can be viewed as a cross-platform option for Amiga developers (using "Amiga developers" in the generic sense).
(You see, I prefer to use "Red" and "Blue" as shorthand for AmigaOS4/AmigaOne and MorphOS/Pegasos, and "Amiga" as a generic term applicable to all Amiga-like platforms, including the "Classic". Otherwise, I'd have to specify every time I say "Amiga", lest people think I'm referring to the branded solution only)