KennyR wrote:
The point is they're still BINARIES, not source or any kind of API documentation.
So? You said there was no decent support for nVidia cards, and no 3D drivers. Nothing about them having to be open source. You were wrong.
The drivers exist - in binary form - but they're good drivers, they're free (as in beer) and they fully support the card features.
Go to nVidia and ask for hardware documentation and you'll be politely told to f*ck off. Welcome to the world of open x86 hardware. 
I don't recall anyone saying it was any different. The gfx card race is really cut-throat and neither ATI or nVidia are willing to spill the beans.
The only ATI drivers that are open source are the reverse engineered ones, which ATI have not supported in any way. ATI do not support Linux and it shows because the ATI drivers for Linux are often plaugued with problems.
The suggestion that one company is evil and closed while the other is open and helpful is laughable.
I don't believe that for a second. A1 was designed (and later replaced by TeronCX) for one purpose, and one purpose only - to run OS4.
So the A1 was designed specifically for an OS which would only exist years later, right? DOH!!!
I'm afraid you're plain wrong. It is true that had Hyperion not picked up the AOS4 mantle when they did Eyetech would have allowed the A1 project to rot away, but to suggest that the A1's creation was motivated solely by AOS4 is a joke.
Since when?? Workarounds for hardware? You're kidding, right? When someone makes a UDMA IDE driver on another PPC system, it should work on Pegasos, right? Well, maybe with a few tweaks. Not with the massive changes that Articia enforces just to get around the PCI bus locking alone! And that's not even going into the workaround for the cache integrity bugs!
A "tweak" to one person is a "workaround" to another one. As long as special mofications are needed, of any sort, that's a workaround to me. Scale is irrelevant.
Most hardware is overhyped and/or bad. I'm fed up off all these sh1tty PC motherboard with huge design flaws being sold off as packaged PCs, for instance.
Sure, but they're being sold at a fifth of the price of a Pegasos board, or even less, and you don't
have to buy them. You can choose another model, and yet get exactly the same compatibility with the rest of your system. Conversely, the alternative to a Pegasos board is...
...another Pegasos board. Not exactly a breadth of choice, then.