But my question is what would Amiga have to be today that would make you abandon your PC (!!!)
Good question.
To be honest, I don’t know.
I feel a bit disconnected with the Amiga community, also.
Many adore the Amiga 600, 1200 and 3000/4000 and Amiga OS 3.x,
while I do relate more to Amiga 1000 and 500/2000 and Kick Start 1.x/WB 1.3.
To me, these 90s Amigas feel as weird as, say, an Atari Falcon feels to an Atari ST 520 user with TOS 1.x.
That being said, I think AROS is cool. If it only had useful software.
My amateur radio hobby wasn't being supported anymore by Amiga platform since 1988/89 or so.
That's when there was SSTV hard and software for Amiga, still, for example.
https://bruxy.regnet.cz/web/sstv/EN/amiga-video-transceiver/
@BinaryDemon The platform is interesting for sure. It's just very niche, with big focus on demoscene, pixel art, retro games etc.
There's also seamless integration between 68k applications and x86 Amiga host.:
It involves Amibridge and Janus-UAE. The 32-Bit x86 versions of Icaros Desktop and AROS One support it, I think.
Both are distributions from vanilla AROS (the one with the Kitty mascot).
The vanilla AROS serves as a basis for developers mainly, essentially.
Some information: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PtDiXhjSIfs
Edit: I think what Amiga did make stand out was its expandibility, the multimedia features and the friendly, snappy graphical OS.
Nowadays, making the Amiga imitate a standard PC or a smartphone doesn't help it.
Because, I think, the Amiga does attract people the most who want the 80s lifestyle back.
Making a modern, powerful Amiga on ARM or RISC V basis would make it both very modern and make it stand out - without sacrificing its soul.
But to make it usable, it also would require cutting-edge applications again.
Like 8k HDR graphics editing, a Photoshop port, a Deluxe Paint 2026. Anything.
Edit: Another idea would be to go back to the roots and re-build an 68k Mac, err, Amiga.
With all the expansions ports and hardware capabilities, but with extensions.
But instead of using something outdated as an 68060 or Power PC processor, an ARM or FPGA core would simulate an 68040/68060 core.
It's important that performance is still able to compete, the Amiga being usable for real world work.
I mean, a modern Amiga that can still interface with 1985 era hardware might be appealing.
As an option, besides things such as modern USB 4 ports, Firewire, Gigabit ethernet and 8k graphics hardware.
Old hardware projects could be revived and modernized, new applications for the "real" Amigas would appear on a side effect.
Such things would appeal both hardware hackers and industrial customers.
Being able to have a modern Amiga as an alternative.
Edit: What I wrote was poorly worded, maybe.
What I meant was, that it would be cool to be able to seamlessly continue where the Amiga/Commodore has left off.
By combining all the developments of the past decades with seamless compatibility to original software and old professional development software,
the Amiga wouldn't be so "meaningless" anymore.
Developers who did abandon the Amiga 30+ years ago could recompile their software with little effort, adapt it to modern standards.
A high-end 680X0 processor implemented in software/FPGA would still impose limitations, but at least provide a full 32-Bit address range.
OK. That's not exactly new, though, I admit.
About 25 years ago, there was AmigaXL for QNX.
The adoption ratw wasn't great, maybe, but performance of the emulated m68k environment was huge.
By using ARM or RISC V, it could be even better now. Just think of PiStorm!
http://www.bambi-amiga.co.uk/amigahistory/emu … /amigaosxl.html
https://github.com/captain-amygdala/pistorm
Edit: On other hand, who's "we"? The Commodore fans? The computer hobbyists? The home users?
Because my hobbys or interests aren’t being reflected by Amiga community, really.
Aside from things like Tracker Music, raytracing and drawing/cartoons.
Things like electronics, chess games, stereograms or astronomy aren’t very popular it seems. Even on Mac platform, there's more nowadays.
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In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
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