[News] Finnish Amiga Users Group Interviews Genesi Management | ANN.lu |
Posted on 18-Mar-2003 21:49 GMT by Anu Seilonen | 29 comments View flat View list |
OULU, FINLAND - March 18th, 2003 - Finnish Amiga Users Group published a translated interview with Bill Buck and Raquel Velasco of Genesi in their latest Saku e-zine. This interview was conducted on March 15th, 2003. For the benefit of the international audience, the original transcript of that interview is now released below. The Finnish Amiga Users Group would like to thank Bill and Raquel for taking the time to answer these questions.
Q: Could you both tell a little bit about yourself and your background.
I'm sure not everyone is familiar with you. And what's with you always
answering together? :-)
A: Well the best thing would be to read the interview from last year here:
http://www.amiga-news.de/archiv02/020417_interview_bb_pt.shtml
There is a picture of us there too... ;-)
Anyway, we are always together. We are married and we work together.
Sometimes the emails are from me and sometimes from Raquel.
Q: Before we go into some details that may interest our Finnish audience,
can you please give us a small status report on what Genesi is doing right
now, and what to expect in the coming weeks and months? What is your event
schedule for the spring?
A: We have spent the last three months bringing the Crossbee team onboard.
You can visit their website here www.crossbee.com. From Crossbee we not
only achieve an experienced management team, but we get the application
software too. This will be integrated into MorphOS and we will offer this
solution to very large institutional clients - hardware, OS, applications
and all tied in to smart cards. On top of this we will introduce further
applications. For example, if you consider the things we have done with the
wireless cameras and PDAs in Thendic-France and you combine this with the
things found here www.ceolia.com you will understand better our long term
direction. Incidentally, Ceolia is joining Genesi too... ;-)
The Pegasos development itself is focused on two key directions:
1. The digital terrestrial television STB running on a PPC and MorphOS.
2. The Pegasos II with the Marvell northbridge.
We will have Pegasos II six layer prototype boards available for our own
tests in less than three months. If things go well, we could be shipping
the Pegasos II much sooner than September, but we will hold to that date
for now.
MorphOS in the meanwhile will be further stabilized and broadened while
the Pegasos II comes to be. We are licensing many interesting things for
MorphOS. ProStation Audio for example will be bundled with the OS itself.
Q: Most of us have read about the Pegasos and the MorphOS. We know these
products and they are available for us to see. But there are other MorphOS
based products on your roadmap. Let's see if I can get them right: 1) the
eclipsis, a hand-held, 2) Psylent, standard Pegasos in a silent case, 3)
the mystery set-top box you have been contracted to do and, finally, 4) the
Pegasos 2. What is the status of these? Did I miss any?
A: The Psylent is basically finished and the new case looks good. You can
see the pictures at www.genesi-support.com. Our large STB project pushed
the eclipsis development back a little, but we are still moving ahead with
that. The Pegasos II we have discussed already.
Q: You also have some other products, such as the Cashboy and the Eyecam.
Could you give us a quick overview of those and what part, if any, they
play in your masterplan?
A: Well, the Cashboy is just a Point of Sale device. We learned about smart
cards with this product. The ComCam we used for the same experience. We
actually have a new product due at the end of the month that is related to
the Crossbee discussion above that uses the new ComCam. Smart cards come
into play in the next phase.
Q: There has been a lot of discussion concerning the Mai Logic Articia S
and the G4. What did you mean when you said the current 600 MHz G3 Pegasos
performs better with it than a 800 MHz G4? Were you referring to general
performace (on average perhaps) or some specific functions? What do you
make of counter-claims that Teron boards with G4 have been running some
Linux games significantly faster than their G3 counterparts - which sounds
pretty logical to a layman?
A: Of course, we meant running applications - any applications are actually
fine. The more the better and all executing simultaneously. Someone else
should define the test. We will happily participate as
expected/required/desired.
We have tested every platform developed by Mai, because we helped them.
We do know what we are saying... ;-)
Q: How about faster G3 processor modules for the Pegasos?
A: No, don't think so...
Q: What are the chances of us seeing more Pegasos boards before Pegasos 2?
Any hints on a possible Plexuscom deal?
A: :-) Cannot say, but the Plexuscom people are coming to Paris after
CeBIT.
Q: What is the status and future of MorphOS on 1) Teron boards (including
AmigaOne) and 2) the Phase 5 PowerPC boards? Any immediate plans for
shrink-wrapped MorphOS packages? Wouldn't a separate version for these
platforms make sense now that the Pegasos is sold out for the moment,
to get the attention of some additional developers and users?
A: Well on the first matter we have tried publicly and privately there
to advance that effort. It has met with far too much disharmony and
unnecessary negativity. We won't touch this issues for a couple more
months... then we will try again.
The second idea is a good one. We are working on a new release for MorphOS
for the Phase5 products now. It will be released within the next couple of
months. We will not be charging for this release.
Q: What do you make of comparisons between Amiga and UNIX, both operating
systems that have been cloned? Would you consider MorphOS and AmigaOS to be
a bit like BSD and UNIX? What do you feel is MorphOS's or Genesi's claim to
its part in the Amiga community?
A: MorphOS is part of the Community. The other questions are really the
stuff for a beer or coffee on a sunny weekend afternoon... ;-)
Q: You have been supporting the demoscene in various ways. Here in Finland
you sent us something to see back in AltParty 2003 and I believe you have
mentioned the Assembly 2003 event in Helsinki in some of your postings.
Have you been in contact with the organizers yet? What are your plans
there? Did you know that Assembly has a history of sponsored compos?
Last year Nokia sponsored a Nokia 7650 Java development competition.
A: Yes, we have good contact with Mikko Virtanen. We should do the same
thing as Nokia!
Q: Okay, I know you know there are people out there who really don't like
you. Your communication style is quite unorthodox. Any comments on that?
A: :-)
Q: For my final question I'll skip the usual, and I'd like to reflect a bit
on the past before looking forward. The Finnish Amiga Users Group turns ten
this spring. When we started, Commodore was still around. During the decade
that followed, we've seen the world move on, but progress in the Amiga
community has been seriously lacking. We even saw you guys have a go at it
once at VIScorp. Now, finally, some progress is being made, but probably
not in the unified direction we all thought it would go ten years ago. The
community is also a bickering shadow of its former self. Any final thoughts
on that?
A: Well, this is 2003. What was before is not now and the sooner we can get
everyone focused on what is here NOW and what can done, we might be able to
create something NEW and BETTER.
Q: Thank you for taking the time to answer these questions!
More information about the Finnish Amiga Users Group and the Saku e-zine
can be found at http://saku.amigafin.org.
About Finnish Amiga Users Group
Finnish Amiga Users Group (officially Suomen Amiga-käyttäjät ry.) is a
registered, non-profit organization dedicated to helping Finnish Amiga
computer users by preserving and advancing the Amiga hobby and knowledge of
the Amiga computing platform in Finland. The group aims to reach its goals
through volunteer efforts such as organizing events and publishing an
e-zine called Saku.
|
|
List of all comments to this article |
Finnish Amiga Users Group Interviews Genesi Management : Comment 27 of 29 | ANN.lu |
Posted by Anonymous on 19-Mar-2003 18:49 GMT | In reply to Comment 24 (Alkis Tsapanidis): @Alkis:
"Reread that announcement. He never claimed that a G3 is faster than a G4.
He claimed that a G3 Pegasos with April 2 is faster than a G4 Teron.
That's QUITE a difference..."
He still did not answer the question - All Pegasos machines have 600MHz G3s, and all G4 Terons have 800MHz G4s. So, he claims that a 600MHz G3 with an April 2 is faster than an 800MHz G4 without one (since both motherboards, as far as the system bus is concerned, are pretty similar except for the April 2). What I want to know is, what tests did he run to show this? I'm sure that one can carefully write a program that runs faster on a 600MHz G3+A2 than on an 800MHz G4, but if I run any 10 "real" PPC programs (applications, not artificial benchmarks), will the G3+A2 consistently (or at least 6 out of 10) beat the G4? *that* is what he claims, and that is what I want to know. |
|
List of all comments to this article (continued) |
|
- User Menu
-
- About ANN archives
- The ANN archives is powered by #AmigaZeux. It was updated daily (news last: 22-Oct-2004; comments last: 18-May-2005).
ANN.lu was created, previously owned and maintained by Christian Kemp, www.ckemp.com.
- Contribute
- Not possible at this time!
- Search ANN archives
- Advanced search
- Hosting
- ANN.lu was hosted by Dreamhost. Sign up through this link, mention "ckemp" as referrer and he will get a 10% commission on any account you purchase.
Please show your appreciation for any past, present and future work on ANN.lu by making a contribution via PayPal.
|