
At OSNews, we have
kept you updated about the Amiga
hardware announced by ACK controls. Supposedly ready for shipping in May, we are now in the second half of September, and still no hardware. Interestingly, nor ACK Controls, nor Amiga, Inc., will be
present at the upcoming Amiga show
Pianeta Amiga - leading to the inevitable conclusion that like so many other announcements in the Amiga world, this one was yet another big puff of air. All hope is not lost, though:
ACube Systems has announced the
SAM440ep, a PowerPC board, of which industrial versions are already available (according to ACube). The consumer version is supposedly ready to ship starting 22nd September 2007, and interestingly,
Hyperion will be present at the ACube booth at Pianeta Amiga. Finally, new Amiga hardware? Seeing is believing, many will say.
Member since:
2006-07-30
LOL! Seriously, though, you've done good work for the platform. Not many people take the time to update wiki pages or update another user with all the info you provided.
I'm hopeful that Hyperion can get it all together soon - I really like what I've seen from this OS (from the microKernel to memory management). I have to agree with the original poster of this thread... I don't think that the PPC is a compelling enough platform for users to consider a new OS (unless they had a line of hardware-based products to go along with it).
Years ago I used the hp200LX (handheld DOS machine which I still have):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HP_200lx
It was great to be able to run the same OS (and the same apps, same data formats) on different devices. I think Hyperion needs to rethink it's long-term strategy about where they want to deliver this product. As a pure gaming machine (ala PSP which uses CELL tech but are finding that high-end tech isn't always enough), a pocket PC/OQO style device, a subnotebook (like the ASUS Eee PC), a desktop for a niche platform, another OS in the now saturated intel/amd market, smartphone, embedded in a number of different products...
Given it's small size and speed - it's one of the few OSes suited to run on multiple vertical markets and varying powered hardware - unchanged (given the right platform) - similar to QNX in this regard. This is it's biggest strength. This is something Apple is doing very effectively (though additional work needs to be done to have it run on lower-powered devices).
Given the frustrated remarks from many long-time Amiga users, this platform and the company behind it really needs to stop everything they're doing and work on a clear attainable roadmap. How they're conducting business now is really working against them.