Ok, so thanks for the story, but the short is: (The developers, who are no longer at the mailing lists, have gone where I can't take part, and) The version for me to get, would be for 86 - Nightly ABI1, to catch the problems, and Nightly ABI0 to be usable.
uhm, no. Not exactly
@deadwood: in case I got something wrong here then please add your (valuable) input.
The people that make distributions (AROS one for instance) and develop software (miker for instance) use the new ABIv0 created by deadwood. It leave things incompatible to older distributions such as Icaros Desktop and AspireOS.
www.aros.org also does not support that old(er) ABIv0 anymore.
Deadwood backports new features from 64-bit ABIv1 back to his (alternate) version of AROS ABIv0 and can be found
here and on
his github here.
The date mentioned in the downloadable archive names is the date that signifies the changes (up to that date) that were made in AROS 64-bit (ABIv1) that can originally be found at
www.aros.org and
https://github.com/aros-development-team/AROS.
That was the information concerning the (32-bit) ABIv0.
Then we have 64-bit (ABIv1 at
www.aros.org) which is forked by deadwood as ABIv11 and is entirely focused on 64-bit AROS. ABIv11 and ABv1 are incompatible with each other.
That would brings us to the icon manager tool, that can be run without doing more harm than HELP. Any progress?
I am not entirely sure what you meant with icon manager tool but am assuming you are referring to the work that user Miker is doing on his icon tools ?
And obviously, this would suggest a tool to make a disk bootable, that'll work on memsticks. Is it there yet, or will I have to move things over from memstick do harddisk each time?
The only way to install AROS is either by physical booting a CD-rom and use the installer or boot AROS from a memory stick and use the installer.
Those are currently the only two options that are available to make it possible to try AROS to run native on hardware.
Actually there is a third, namely using a raw HD in a VM, boot AROS from ISO or memory stick in the VM and install AROS to the raw attached HD. Afterwards, move the HD physcially from your VM machine to the final hardware where you want to have AROS run, but that is tiresome, not for the fainthearted and thus not for everyone.