Letting the World Know
      November 19, 2002 - With the AmigaOne now shipping and AmigaOS4.0 in 
      its final stages of development and testing, the time has come to begin 
      letting the rest of the world know the good news, that the Amiga is alive, 
      well and ready to let the World have fun with computing again.
      We all know that the current hard core of Amiga users is not enough to 
      build a sustainable and thriving community. We have to appeal to those 
      who, for whatever reason left the Amiga months and years ago but who still 
      retain a fondness for their old platform. Whether disillusioned with their 
      existing offering, looking for a new way or simply wanting to return, the 
      marketing for the reborn Amiga must concentrate itself on these people, 
      the five million or so who once owned an Amiga and who could do so once 
      more.
      The last six months has seen us experimenting with presence at various 
      multi-format shows and nurturing relationships with TV, web and paper 
      publications in order to test the waters and to set out our stall for the 
      big push forwards. Even in this informal process, the response has been 
      fantastic, whether in the US, the UK, Europe or Australia. People remember 
      the Amiga and want it back.
      We have taken all this research and, in conjunction with Amiga 
      developers, retailers, user groups, publications, Amiga Inc, Eyetech and 
      Hyperion have decided that we will concentrate on four official large 
      scale multi-format shows around the globe, in order to maximize our 
      presence, message and exposure. This will compromise a show roughly every 
      quarter, one for Europe, one for the US and Canada, one for the UK and one 
      for the Antipodes (Australia, New Zealand and Asia). 
      The first of these shows will be the official launch of the AmigaOne 
      and AmigaOS4.0, to occur at the CeBit show in Germany in March (and before 
      anyone asks, this does not mean this is the release date for AmigaOS4.0, 
      it means that CeBit will be the public launch of it). With the huge 
      exposure and attendance that CeBit brings in, and being in Germany, one of 
      the spiritual homes of the Amiga, we think this an appropriate and 
      exciting venue.
      In addition we will support several other important national shows on a 
      cooperative basis with the dealers, user groups and organizations in those 
      countries. Commitments have already been given to attend the SINTEP show 
      in Toulouse, France in April 2003, and at least one of the Micromart shows 
      in Birmingham, UK.
      We will also support local dealers and organizers of the main Amiga 
      user group shows worldwide (subject to fitting in with the schedule of the 
      larger shows above) such as the Alt-WoA and WoA-SE shows in the UK, as 
      well as the main shows in France, Germany, the USA and Canada. If you 
      currently - or would like to - organize such a show during 2003 and would 
      like Amiga Inc, and/or Hyperion and/or Eyetech to attend please contact us 
      as soon as early as possible during the planning stage. Given the limited 
      resources we all have, and the cost and complexity of planning for the 
      quarterly shows, we cannot guarantee attendance but we will do our best to 
      support the community wherever it gets together to enjoy the Amiga 
      platform.
      So much for 2003 - what about the remainder of 2002, and in particular 
      the Aachen show? We have all, both as individual companies and together, 
      thought long and hard about this show. It has been decided that the timing 
      could not be worse from our respective points of view. 
      Eyetech is committed to delivering the Earlybird systems for Christmas 
      that week and Amiga Inc is fully occupied fulfilling an AmigaAnywhere 
      contract, and product launch. Whilst visiting with all of you is 
      important, we believe that it is more important to ship products right 
      now, and we simply can not work the show into our schedules.
We 
      wanted to share this with you because many in the community have asked the 
      same questions that we have asked ourselves. How will the community grow 
      and thrive? It can only do so through increased sales, and that means 
      increased awareness. As we move from survival mode to growth mode, the 
      small, local shows, however much fun cannot provide this level of exposure 
      and awareness. By marching proudly and strongly into the mainstream shows, 
      and taking the community with us, we are announcing that we are back, once 
      and for all.
      Have no doubt that after 8 years of darkness, 2003 will be the year 
      that the Amiga once again makes the World remember that there is a better 
      way.
      Thank you, as ever, for your continued support and commitment.
      Bill McEwen and the team at Amiga
Ben Hermans, Hyperion 
Alan 
      Redhouse, Eyetech