As a former C.Amiga user, I just joined you.
Aros has been with great success, a spark to morph os and others. This is beautiful.
Users continue on their old system with AmigaOs 4.01 or Morph os and with aros.
In this sense, Aros has completed its mission perfectly. Because, with winuae etc, they somehow use and play classic applications.
With this success of Aros, Users were so impressed that they now want to see a 64-bit complete Aros.
this seems very clear in correspondence.
There seems to be no need to defend the 32-bit Aros. Already AmigaOs 4 and morph Os, Winuae is doing that part.
What more can Aros do at this stage in 386x32?
I believe that Amiga ideas will come true with 64bit, even after us.
They start a search just because they want it.
whereas the option is right in front of us.
Arosx64!
Everyone dreamed of that, and it is what we like to see.
The problem is that it is not there, it is not ready.
OS developers can blame that they lack a distribution, dedicated developers.
Problem is that it is buggy and distribution maintainers tried to make this happen.
Years pas by and if ABI v.1, AMD64 version would not have stalled ABI v.0 there would have
been more activity.
This made diversity among developers, users and many AROS promoters left. It there are no progress that is useful
there are no use for the system. This is like you have a better car but you have no wheels for it.
The car is useless in that state. It is absolutely no garantee the car will ever have its wheels!
Last but not least this better car can not compete with the best out there.
It is a hobby OS and we have fun with it. We enjoy what we have and like to keep that alive.
I think this is where classic Amiga OS and other classic systems survive. They accept the limitations and embrace it, not everything has to go forward. I understand that modern stuff is all 64-bit now but why do we really need 64-bit? SMP is not even possible without breaking compatibility with classic Amiga OS. There been talks about a new Amiga like OS but then we already have Linux and other alternatives. What would be the point?
I will put it in short as I don't want endless discussions and too much text:
- SMP is already DONE!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4is9ZHeFfIs and it's a perfect example of what's wrong with this situation: After hard work, it was acheived 3 years ago! then? ... nothing happened with it. Nobody test/used it because it never officially appeared. meanwhile a lot of work, time and effort was put on Abi0.
- "Aros 64 is not there", so what? while abi0 aros was being developed, it wasn't also there. Does it mean their devs should focus on developing os3 further? the answer was NO, right? the right way was keep working on aros until "it is there". Later, they were aware of the design flaws of the original kernel, so they decided to start again doing it right (not an easy decision at all). Why screw all their efforts concentrating our attention in the wrong version?
- "We cannot compete" that's very debatable: While we won't create windows 10 overnight, there niche devices and configurations which may have a good market for Aros: Raspberry Pi, RiscV boards, old wintel machines, etc...
- "We enjoy what we have and like to keep that alive" Sorry but IMHO that's preciselly the wrong way to see it: it may live a bit for some time, but it is the way to a secured death: devices get old, it is harder everyday to get new connectors, cables, screens supporting our screenmodes, IDE hardrives, even compact flash cards. Let's not even talk about disk drives (rip). What will happen when we cannot find those devices? That's why I insist in keep going forward: I don't want a slow death of the Amiga. I want it alive. Even it does not have everything, if it has only a decent (modern) browser, it can do a lot of things (there are office suites, and even all kind of design, music and programming tools for browsers) and a couple other basic tools, which we alreadty have (just need updates), that's enough for me. But the only way to atract new devs and users is with a competent OS, and mnost important: an OS that they can use in their main computers. I have a very powerful (gamer) PC but I would switch in a heartbeat to use AROS as much time as possible instead of the terrible windows10 if it supported its hardware.
- And this bring me to the final argument "impossible to support all hardware". Sure. I agree. But I'm also sure people would understand that just maybe 1, 2, 3 or 5 at the most configurations are "officially" supported by an AROS dev board (which their devs can select at their taste) and everybody will understand and support.I propose something like: 1 powerful/gaming config (I know kalamatee has an OpenGL/vulkan update almost ready), 1 office/modest/old hardware, and 1 risc/mobile device (RPi, Mobile, Risc board).
But I'll say it for the last time: time is running out. This is the last chance. If the aros devs don't keep all their priceless time in the future/sustainability of aros, it will slowly die.