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It was pretty much inevitable with the Amiga, and not because of management... ( http://www.osnews.com/permalink?539079 & its minuscule at its height share compared to the PC http://arstechnica.com/articles/culture/total-share.ars & note how none of such platforms survived - except for consoles, but their manufacturers have a matching business model, of extracting money from dev houses, which couldn't had been introduced for Amiga once the cat was out of the bag - people would really dislike that, everybody ignored CD32; Apple just sells PC tech, the new "Amigas" are really just PCs with weird CPUs for no good reason)
Ehh, this will be the next Amiga myth (seems it's cool now to clung to the stretched-ipod-nano N9 ...myths about its sales numbers, and smooth experience of the OS)
Edited 2012-10-19 00:08 UTC




Member since:
2011-01-14
And one which repeatedly brought the Amiga to mind, with colossal management issues ultimately leading to the loss of a platform right when it should have been flourishing. Still, like you say, there is a ray of hope from the Jolla team, and with a bit of luck they'll have something to market worthy of replacing my N9 when that time inevitably arrives.