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.. be something they cannot have for 6 months to a year. They have generally been excited to start with, and then we have had to tell them no demo can ever be shown because the developers do not agree.
I myself was involved in getting a MorphOS developer version to a potential partner of Genesi...
I have my sources as to what the current state of MorphOS was at any and every point, and have even demoed a copy of MorphOS 1.5 at a government level in mid-2004. It was hard to even get that copy, but after some phone calls it was agreed (the day before the demo).
To be honest, MorphOS 1.5 was good enough then to show, despite Ralph's objections at the time, I do not see how it turned to trash, stagnated over a period of 4 years, only to be fixed to the point of being demonstrable barely a week ago.
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If you were seriously interested, I would suggest you look harder. There are quite a number of things that were added shortly before the release.
I do not think any of them affect the stability of the OS as a controlled, private demonstration.
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That appears to be a good point, Matt. AROS should be even better suited as motivated students could contribute to the OS itself and get a better understanding of its inner workings by looking at the freely available source.
The whole point is that they do not need to know these inner workings; otherwise they would not be taught Java or C# programming on Windows. They do not have the source code to the JVM sitting next to their own code for reference and simply do not need to. MorphOS, Java and C# have stable, well documented APIs (of some sort), whereas you cannot say that about Linux from one kernel to the next, sometimes you cannot even rely on the same API being there from one distribution to the next.
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You seem to grossly misunderstand what drives MorphOS users and developers.
No, not really.
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It is not about "beating" other operating systems, it is about providing an alternative which hopefully fits better to the indvidual needs of those people who are unhappy with either Windows or MacOS.
I do not think you can be unhappy with MacOS and think that MorphOS is some kind of solution. Don't get me started on the messiah complex surrounding this group of operating systems (MorphOS, AmigaOS, AROS).
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The acts of interacting with a computer and driving from place A to place B may seem incredibly boring. However, given the right tools, they can be rather fun.
Transistor radio kits were fun 25 years ago too, but now we have multiplexed, multichannel high-fidelity digital audio broadcasting.
The benefit and curse of MorphOS is it brings that 25-year-old naïvité out, just like no student or developer is going to be soldering together a few kit components to make a DAB receiver, therefore they need to cut their teeth on building their first electronics hobby kit, they are also probably not going to have a PDP-11 to learn about UNIX on, so they have to run FreeBSD or heaven forbid Linux.
You can run MorphOS on a board made a year ago (hopefully even on one made a year from now) and it's an easy to access system which you can build a lot of things from (considering the interdependency of components and size of the OS). It doesn't have a heavy legacy of constant, intrusive updates such as Windows or MacOS has (MacOS isn't even the same OS, you could say that too about Windows 2000/XP/Vista).
However, it brings with it this whole Amiga legacy of "this is the best OS ever made" or at least "it shares it's roots with the best OS ever made".
As a desktop OS, it's fairly obviously untrue, and anything more than using it as an easily embeddable technology is pointless though except as a native developer environment (nobody seriously uses MorphOS in a development capacity however without a null modem cable and another PC sitting next to it to capture the output).
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Like I said, they had their chance.. and refused it.
No idea what you are referring to.
Pick any time we had a chance to show MorphOS to a set of partners and developers that were willing to plough hundreds of thousands of dollars into development, only for the "MorphOS Team" to decide that they did not want to show it in the state it was in.
Fast forward less than a month from that time and I will show you a video in Polish, Hungarian, Finnish, German, showing that OS to a bunch of drunken Amiga geeks who have only sat down to see it because they are waiting for Lotus Esprit Turbo Challenge 2 to load from floppy..
That is what I mean by refused, that is what I mean by missed opportunities.