@amigakit
Quote:
Final Edition was freudian slip when named? It was certainly priced as a fire-sale without seemingly any forward planning to development and investment.
Yes, that's quite possible
I'm of course aware of all the things that happened or didn't happen or came in the way. But that's not the point. Our debate needs to return to the fundamental question:
how do we increase the OS4 userbase? Even more so because in my opinion, there are two new factors that make this goal harder to reach (compared to the situation from some years ago):
1) The retro Amiga market is now so much more vibrant and attractive, offering numerous solutions for people who would like to "return to the Amiga" in some form. This significantly narrows the space for OS4 and AmigaOS clones (i.e. the Next-Gen Amiga in general).
2) I'm afraid you no longer have a viable product to sell to new users. The A1222+ has been delayed to the point of becoming irrelevant: the design is obsolete, the actual manufacturing is in limbo, the OS is not finished, noone's working on an SDK needed to compile software for the arcane SPE unit. Focus seems to be on developing an AmigaOS clone in a situation where we already have two clones, both of them strugling with the same userbase problem.
All this creates uncertainty which not only makes the platform unattractive to potential new adopters, but also raises doubts among the existing userbase whether we like the future that is being presented to us. Or worse, whether the platform has a future at all and is worth our time and money.