It was a long, long time ago. A quite younger myself (Paolo Besser) presented AROS to some hundreds of people visiting Pianeta Amiga 2007, a still popular italian fair about Amiga products. While showing it at the event, I realized that the best way to advertise the open-source Amiga “clone” among the Amiga community was to prove it was already able to do things: AROS, in fact, was being developed for 12 years, but very little was known about its applications outside of its little community of developers and hackers. Most people believed it was simply too far, feature-wise, from AmigaOS and MorphOS to be actually useful for anything. This was, sadly, partially true. AROS hardware support was tiny, it didn’t talk with USB devices, it had not hardware acceleration, it could barely do networking but it hadn’t even a browser. There were many software pieces already in place, but almost nobody knew how to chain and take advantage of them. Moreover, most AROS applications were difficult to find and configure, so the best most people did with AROS builds was just downloading them from time to time, test the graphic demos, and forget about it 10 minutes later. A real pity: people poking with Lunapaint at Pianeta Amiga 2007 showed amusement and were impressed to see a common PC running an Amiga-ish operating system so nicely. Something more had to be done!
Icaros is probably the best and easiest way to experience AROS – and thus, an AmigaOS-like operating system – today. Great work, and here’s to another ten years!
I can’t wait for the 64-bit SMP kernel to be ready for production use. It’s exciting to see Amiga step into the 21st century!
Disclaimer: I’ve never used an Amiga, nor have I run AROS. In fact, I’m not sure I’d even understand how to run anything, where to put what, etc. (I thought FPC had an AROS port nowadays, but I can’t find it, at least not on FPC’s website. Has this not been merged yet?)
But this is very impressive work. It’s always good to see improvements on such OSes (woefully underappreciated). Nice history, nice screenshots, nice features!
I’m not a FPC user, but I have seen people mentioning ports for the various Amiga platforms on the Amiga forums recently. Also, this might have more info: http://fpcamigawiki.alb42.de/