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- {subhead} Jim Collas, Open letter to the community{def}{p}
- Article by Jim Collas
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- {p} {p}
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- The following is an open letter to the Amiga Community from the new
- Amiga President, Jim Collas...
- {p} {p}
- Executive Update{p}
- · · OPEN LETTER TO THE COMMUNITY{p}
- April 1999
- {p} {p}
- This is my first open letter to the Amiga community. In many ways, I am
- honored by the opportunity to address such a great community of people
- and represent such a unique brand as Amiga. There are many remarkable
- Amigans, both former and current, that are responsible for Amiga's
- impressive products and its spirit of revolutionary innovation. These
- are the people that created the Amiga phenomena and the people that
- persevered through these tough times. Amiga communities from across
- the world have kept the Amiga spirit alive. I can't claim any
- responsibility for the early success of Amiga or the current endurance.
- I can only praise the people responsible and hope that I can help
- bring a new era of greatness to Amiga and fulfill the hopes of the
- Amiga community.
- {p} {p}
- The St. Louis show a few weeks ago was the first Amiga show I attended
- as president of Amiga. From the feedback I have received, the show
- was a great success. The show was well organized with good attendance
- and was also a lot of fun. The number of people who attended was
- approximately 1,200 but more important is the fact that there was a
- 14% increase in attendance from last year. I made my debut as
- president of Amiga and I want to thank everyone who welcomed me to the
- community. I especially want to thank those who welcomed me until
- 3:00 a.m. in the morning and taught me that Amigans really know how to
- have fun. You know who you are.
- {p} {p}
- In St. Louis, I had the opportunity to spend a significant amount of
- time with people in the Amiga community. Several times during the show,
- I publicly made the statement that the Amiga community is the greatest
- community in the computer industry. I am now more convinced of this
- than ever. The Amiga community is the most innovative, dedicated,
- heroic and enduring community in the computer industry. I am amazed at
- what the community has done with little or no support from a corporate
- entity. You have endured through extremely tough times and kept the
- spirit of Amiga alive and strong.
- {p} {p}
- Unfortunately, some of the difficulties the Amiga community has endured
- in the last two years stem from some misguided decisions made by Amiga
- Inc. It is now obvious to me that some very big mistakes were made in
- defining a path for Amiga in the last two years. The low priority and
- support given to Amiga by our parent company, Gateway, aggravated this
- situation. Gateway was preoccupied during this period with significant
- internal restructuring to strengthen its core business for the future.
- The intentions relative to Amiga were good but the situation was
- mismanaged. Some people have told me that I should stop talking about
- past mistakes and only look toward the future. I agree with this but I
- also want people to clearly understand that I realize how much our
- past mistakes have hurt the community and delayed progress. This is
- important because I do not want to repeat these mistakes so be patient
- as I discuss this one last time.
- {p} {p}
- In my opinion, the biggest mistake was the decision not to evolve the
- current Amiga architecture as we developed the next generation. This
- hurt the current Amiga community the most. The right decision would
- have been to overlap product generations just as Apple did during the
- Apple II to Macintosh transition. Apple evolved the Apple II
- architecture by introducing the Apple III even after Apple came out
- with the Mac. The Apple III wasn't a big seller but it helped Apple II
- hardware and software companies and allowed them time to transition
- their products to the new Mac platform.
- {p} {p}
- In hindsight and from the vantage of the Amiga community, not evolving
- the current architecture may look like an incredibly stupid mistake but
- it was not as obvious to people coming from the PC industry. I am not
- trying to justify this flawed decision but to give some insight as to
- how such a decision could be made. Living in a computer industry
- dominated by Wintel PCs skewed the thinking of people making this
- decision. In a computer industry dominated by Wintel PCs, computers
- are obsolete within six to twelve months. The inefficiency of the
- architecture requires a continuous upgrading of CPUs, graphics, and
- storage devices in order to deliver acceptable improvements in features
- and functions. This is what happens in an industry where revolutionary
- innovation has been replaced by constrained evolution. From this PC
- centric view, no one could imagine that a computer architecture that
- stopped evolving in the early '90s could have any life left in it.
- Obviously this view was very limited and flawed as the Amiga community
- has proven over-and-over again how much life was left in the current
- Amiga architecture.
- {p} {p}
- It is obvious that the community would currently be stronger if we had
- made the decision two years ago to evolve the current Amiga architecture.
- Two years have now passed and we are faced with a tough question. Is
- there still life left in the current architecture? I believe that
- there is. The release of O/S 3.5 in late July or early August will
- allow the current architecture to live on for a few more years. In
- addition to O/S 3.5 we are looking at supporting companies that are
- looking at hardware enhancements to the current architecture. We will
- also support emulation of the current Amiga architecture on the next
- generation Amiga so that people can use most of their old software. I
- am spending time with key people in the Amiga community to finalize
- transition plans between the current Amiga and the next generation.
- {p} {p}
- Now, it's time to talk about the future! I know this has been an
- extremely difficult and painful period for the Amiga community but I
- would like to put that chapter of the Amiga story behind us and look
- toward the future. We have a difficult road ahead of us with many
- important decisions to be made on our future plans. I will not make
- the mistake again of not understanding the Amiga community, its
- requirements, and its dynamics. St Louis was a good start for me but
- I require even more input to better understand the situation. As all
- of you know, the Amiga community is very strong in Europe with many
- Amiga companies and extremely impressive individuals. I am planning a
- trip to Germany and the U.K. in late April to meet with more leaders
- in the Amiga community. The objective of my trip is partially to
- communicate our current thinking but mostly to listen and understand.
- I want to understand the opinions of prominent people in the Amiga
- community. I will use this input to finalize our future architecture
- and plans. I especially need help in planning out how we will
- transition from the old architecture to the new architecture in such a
- way that keeps the Amiga community healthy.
- {p} {p}
- One thing clearly requested by the Amiga community was BETTER
- COMMUNICATION on the activities at Amiga. I promise to improve our
- communication starting with this letter and continuing with frequent
- postings on our Web site as well as increased interaction with the
- community. Our participation in the St. Louis show and my upcoming trip
- to Germany and the U.K. are good examples of our efforts in this area.
- The letter you are currently reading is posted on our Web site in the
- new "Executive Update" section that I will personally be updating on a
- monthly basis. In this section you will also find an update on major
- activities listed after the monthly letter to the community. I think
- this is a good start and we will continue improving our communication
- as we go forward. If you have any input on my executive update web
- page or on how to improve our communication please send your suggestions
- via email to executive@amiga.com. You can also send email to me
- directly at jim.collas@amiga.com but I get significant amounts of email
- so it may take me a few days to respond. The executive@amiga.com email
- address goes to my assistant who in turn directs the email to the Amiga
- executive that can most effectively reply.
- {p} {p}
- I know that I have yet to prove my dedication or win your confidence
- but I hope to do so over the coming months. As many of you already
- know, I stepped out of a senior executive position with Gateway that
- was a very prominent position in the PC industry to lead Amiga. I did
- this because I believe strongly in what Amiga stands for. I believe in
- the Amiga spirit of revolutionary innovation. I believe that the PC
- revolution is over because innovative revolution has been replaced by
- constrained evolution. I believe that there is a new computer
- revolution on the horizon, one that will fulfill the promise of
- bringing the power of computing to the masses. Most importantly, I
- believe that Amiga will play a significant role in this new computer
- revolution. But Amiga can't do this without the full support of the
- Amiga community. The Amiga community is one of the greatest and most
- innovative communities in the computer industry. It is a revolutionary
- army waiting to strike and reclaim its prominent position in the
- computer industry. I truly believe this from the depths of my heart
- and I promise to use all of my experience, resources, industry contacts,
- and energy to give Amiga a strong and aggressive push. I hope I will
- not let you down.
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- Let's keep the momentum going as we come back for the future.
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- Sincerely,{p}
- Jim Collas{p}
- President, Amiga
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- Copyright by AMIGA