[News] Motion for Summary Judgement Against Amiga to be Heard on Nov 21, 2003. | ANN.lu |
Posted on 16-Nov-2003 08:23 GMT by Rich Woods | 263 comments View flat View list |
Motion for Summary Judgement Against Amiga to be Heard on Nov 21, 2003 in Washington Federal District Court.
Motion for Summary Judgement Against Amiga to be Heard on Nov 21, 2003 in Washington Federal District Court.
It also looks like Amiga is again without counsel.
"This matter comes before the Court on "Plantiffs' Motion for Judgement and dismissal of Counter Claims for Lack of Representation." Although corporations must be represented by counsel, defendant's failure to retain new counsel has not yet been given rise to a sanctionable failure to prosecute. Plantiff's motion for judgement and dismissal of the counterclaims is DENIED. Defendant must, however, obtain counsel to defend this litigation if it hopes to avoid an adverse ruling on plaantiff's pending motion for summary judgement.
DATED this 7th day of November,2003.
/s/
robert S. Lasnik
United States District Judge
Get it here .
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Motion for Summary Judgement Against Amiga to be Heard on Nov 21, 2003. : Comment 184 of 263 | ANN.lu |
Posted by gary_c on 19-Nov-2003 06:48 GMT | In reply to Comment 180 (Anonymous): > Sorry Downix, but you know as well as I do that you're not competing with Windows, and your toy motherboard that needs to be mix'n'matched before it will even take a G4 is no competition for a Powerbook or a G5.
Downix is right. Why would Genesi compete with Amiga, Inc. solely within the "Amiga market" when there aren't enough potential customers remaining here to justify the investment? Why do you think Genesi is talking about other OSs so much and investing to get them ported to Pegasos? Of course Genesi wants to sell to people who are already aware of them and Amiga -- basically a no-cost sale as far as marketing is concerned -- but that's just the first stage, and not a sufficient one. The competition that will make or break the Pegasos lies outside the Amiga market, just as the viability of the AmigaOne doesn't depend on current users (whose numbers are too few to support the product alone) but on how well the product can attract new users.
You could say that both Genesi and Amiga will be in competition for those new users, but this will depend on the specific match-up of their products. As long as AmigaOne is primarily targetted at current, returning and new AmigaOS users, and the Pegasos is pushed as a multi-OS platform as well as a follow-on to the classic Amiga platform, there's only a subset of customers in contention. And that's in addition to any hardware differentiation or service tie-ins, etc. up the road.
-- gary_c |
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