A History Of The Amiga, Part 11

<https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2017/11/a-history-of-the-amiga-part-11-between-an-escom-and-a-gateway/>: Then came an announcement that caused an uproar in the Amiga community; some even saw it as a betrayal. Jim Collas’ team revealed that it was switching the OS kernel for Amiga OE from QNX to Linux. ... In retrospect, this was probably the correct choice. Linux, then and now, supported a much more diverse array of hardware and was already gaining significant momentum in the tech industry. But Amiga fans didn’t see it that way at the time. They saw Linux as bloated, clunky, and slow, the exact opposite of their beloved Amiga. QNX Neutrino was seen as fast, small, and elegant, and the community had rallied behind it. This takes place in 1999. I did spend some time with Amiga fans about a decade earlier. Being a Mac fan at the time, I saw it as a bad move to tie to OS architecture so closely to particular quirks of the hardware. And sure enough, that did cause compatibility problems for Amiga software on later hardware.
participants (1)
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Lawrence D'Oliveiro