Originally posted by wizard69
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Hyperion Confirms Leak Of AmigaOS 3.1 Source Code
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I Confirm The Leak Of Dice 1.2 Application Source Code
This application is running a secret algorithm to show a random number between 1 and 6 (included).
Dice 1.2 is an actively developed product on sale and still incorporates a substantial amount of Dice 1.1 code...While this would be already more than enough of a reason to care about the unauthorised disclosure and distribution, it is also the very same settlement agreement which made all of this possible in the first place, which contractually requires me to enforce and protect any intellectual property rights associated with Dice including the Dice 1.1 source-code.
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Oh, lol, sometimes greed can look really counterproductive, and AmigaOS is really noteworthy example. So, do they claim this abandonware/vaporware haves some commercial VALUE? LOL, blaming code leak as their marketing failure reason sounds like a really poor and silly excuse, dammit. Windows leaked code of W2k and XP, but it basically changed nothing. At the end of day, code is hard to read, using it means huge legal risks, there're no devs ouside of MS who are competent with it, and overall it just looks pointless to mess with it - nice way to waste your time with no measurable gains and high chance to get your butt grilled by MS legal dep't.
AmigaOS. at last 3.x not even had proper memory protection, so technicaly it below even of Win95. Not sure about 4.x since it mostly looks like overpriced waporware for nostalgic idiots. Since I do not consider myself one of these, I never had a look on it.Last edited by SystemCrasher; 06 January 2016, 11:45 AM.
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I recall that AmigaOS 1.0 was written in BCPL; was the code ever rewritten into C or another language by the time AmigaOS 3.1 rolled down the pipeline? In any event, the 3.1 code is of little use unless it's running on the pre-1996, m68k-based Amiga hardware.
The way ahead for the Amiga fans is quite fractured. What Hyperion is developing with Amiga 4.x is a curiosity from a nostalgic point of view, but the high cost of the current Amiga hardware puts it out of reach for all but the most rabid Amiga fanboy. MorphOS will run on cheap second-hand PPC Macs, but it's still not worth the cost of the Mac and the OS. At least AROS is free of charge, open source, and interesting to run in a VM. Emulators like WinUAE are probably the best way for people who miss Amiga to experience it again.
If people want a truly modern OS that keeps the Amiga legacy alive, I'd suggest giving DragonflyBSD a test drive. It features resident applications and message passing features inspired by Amiga, and the project lead is a former Amiga developer.
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Originally posted by sarmad View PostIt's too late now, but AmigaOS would've been alive and healthy now if the company ported the OS to PC as soon as Commodore went out of business. Too bad, as Amiga OS was really ahead of its time.
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Originally posted by profoundWHALE View Post
A major issue they had was marketing. I remember my Dad telling me how frustrated the Amiga users were because the Amiga computers were the best, but no one knew.
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Originally posted by sarmad View Post
Yup, absolutely true. I remember those days. Amiga has a solid light weight GUI interface with true multitasking that can be booted from a single 3.5" floppy disk when PC was still in DOS using CPU interrupts to perform background tasks.
I just read an article from 2010 which sums up the situation pretty well (for those who don't know what we're talking about)
Originally posted by technologizerBasically, the companies that built Amiga apps and add-ons seemed to understand the machine’s potential far better than Commodore’s executives ever did.Last edited by profoundWHALE; 06 January 2016, 05:06 PM.
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