@I Regret That I Have But One Life To Give For My Amiga @
It's getting tougher and tougher to keep a bright and cheery
disposition.
After all, as I write this, we're just days away from the 10th month of
Commodore's liquidation, and all we have to show for it are a load of
promises, magazine articles promising a quick solution, and what seems
like a gigabyte of Usenet articles proclaiming that Company X has REALLY
bought out Commodore!
What has that meant for the Amiga community? It was hardly growing at
a breakneck pace while Commodore was hanging by a thread, aside from
making inroads into Europe's game console market. Now, of course, both
the user and the developer bases are eroding.
At the same time, we're looking at new, seemingly bizarre products. A
"laptop" about the size of a 3000, Bring Your Own Motherboard. A
pseudo-clone in production with an astronomical price but capable of
powering the VLab Motion non-linear videotape editing system. And at
least 3 independent projects to replace the Amiga OS with something
similar.
Certainly, these aren't signs of rejuvination, but of innovation-
workarounds for problems that can't be solved in the conventional manner
anymore.
So, what is there to do? Bail out of the Amiga market? I've given it
a bit of thought myself. Then it occurred to me-there is absolutely no
good reason to. I don't rely on my computer for income, I rely on it for
entertainment, and I'm getting that much. Besides, the "other" computers
will likely always be there for you later, so why not ride the storm out
now and see where it leads?
Clearly, those who DO rely on their machine for money are faced with
serious quandries, and I feel for them, and understand when they switch
machines. But that can't be helped.
What does the future hold? A huge challenge. It can be argued that a
new computer platform has not been successfully introduced to the mass
market in over 10 years-if you define success by "The parent company
still exists", that would be the Macintosh. Any new company is faced
with having to beat those odds.
What's the key? Software, of course. The purchasing perception of the
mass market is based on the availablility of software-usually a few catchy
and popular titles. I would submit that grabbing one major developer in
the business field would be sufficient. MicroSoft would be a logical, but
unsavory, choice. Aldus/Adobe would be nice. Novell wouldn't hurt. A
few others would fit the bill-with their software suite ported to the
Amiga, it would appear to be a "serious" contender.
On the other side of the coin, winning the consideration of a major
software publisher is critical. Electronic Arts would be the most logical
choice-their sales figures are absolutely staggering, and they would bring
some of the "hottest multimedia titles", especially through Origin.
CEI, Commodore UK, and whoever else thinks they want a shot need to
court these players now, or the Amiga may be dead-on-rearrival.
**************************************
*Jason Compton is the Editor-in-Chief*
*of Amiga Report, possibly the best *
*Amiga online mag(not including Amiga*.
*Link, ofcourse). He also contribute*
*to Amiga Game Zone. With all this *
*running around, it's no wonder he's *
*one of the most respected Amiga *
*experts around! He can be reached *
*at: *
*jcompton@xnet.com *
**************************************
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