Following is an interview of SASG's opinion on the new aquisition of the
Amiga assets, which has been published in several Amiga magazines:
1.) What is your comment on Gateway 2000 as new Amiga owner?
SASG is very positive about Gateway 2000. This is a company with almost
10000 employees with big assets and monetary power. They have already proven
that their advertisement efforts and PR are amongst the best in the computer
market. Their MS-DOS based systems are very often cited in benchmark tests and
reviews as reference systems. So, Gateway 2000 has a good reputation in the
public eyes. As far as the Amiga is concerned we think that this is the
best that could have happened to our computer, since GW2000 has always shown
interest in platforms other than the MS-DOS-PC. And here is not only
interest, but financial stability that speaks for GW2000 as the new Amiga
owner.
2.) If Gateway continues the development of the Amiga, how will that
affect your company regarding the Amiga market?
As many Amiga users probably know, the Standardized Amiga Shareware Group
(www.sasg.com) was founded back in early 1994, which was the time of the
downfall of Commodore. Our reason to found SASG was to show our solidarity
with the Amiga and its users worldwide after this crisis. We wanted the
world to know that there are authors of renowned software products (like
MUI, MagicWB, MCX, DFA) that do not drop the Amiga. At that time we felt
that shareware has a greater potential than ever before. For this reason,
we revolutionized the shareware idea by offering more service, support,
presence and comfort for the same low usual shareware fee. Our new
concept proved to be highly successful amongst the Amiga users who embraced
it enthusiastically.
So, our support for the Amiga market was and will always be exceptionally
strong, independent of any changing situation of the Amiga assets. This has
always been the core philosophy of SASG; we want the Amiga to survive at
all cost by constantly improving it with our software to make it more
appealing to the users. Still, the news about Gateway 2000 as the new owner
of the Amiga inspires us to new ideas and certainly is instilling positive
energy into our productive efforts.
3.) Do you believe the Amiga market can grow and be big enough
once again?
Certainly. We can underline from our own experience in the last three years
that the Amiga user base is still very active and engaged. The Amiga user
is a quite special species that holds very tight to his computer, since he
is very knowledgable and knows about the many advantages of the Amiga system
over other platforms. This is the main potential of the Amiga: Very
dedicated users that will fight for a continuation of the Amiga line of
computers with all means. And now, as they get a new change to support the
Amiga again, you can bet they will! This is our definite conviction.
4.) What is the most important thing for Gateway to do right now?
The most important thing to do first is to supply the world with the
complete line of Amiga computers again. We know from an analysis that
there is a great demand for the existing Amiga computers. We couldn't believe
our own eyes, but the demand is really huge. GW2000 certainly knows about
that and will satisfy this demand as soon as possible.
You have our consent to copy and publish the above interview on any
existing media,
provided that you do not truncate it, i.e. you have to
publish it in its entire form.
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