I looked on the AP site before I posted, but this list was all I could find, and it's not very helpful. I think contacting the BBC is not in vain, though; hell, maybe the AP will hear from them.
So much for the code of ethics they claim to adhere to...
This article mentions Amiga peripherally at best, yet it's an "amiga topic". Am I missing something? QNX was proposed, and then dropped as an Amiga partner a while ago, weren't they?
I think we've got enough confusion about what the Amiga is and isn't without mentioning some OS that was tied to what was a very different Amiga corporation a few years ago.
Ummm, it's just this kind of thinking that will destroy us all.
Well, not all of us. Just Red Hat, IBM, and...well, you know the rest.
Seriously, where do they find these people?
-B
I looked on the AP site before I posted, but this list was all I could find, and it's not very helpful. I think contacting the BBC is not in vain, though; hell, maybe the AP will hear from them.
So much for the code of ethics they claim to adhere to...
- BMO
ortega@nospam.mindless.com
The BBC site has feedback forms which seem ideally suited to this sort of crap.
I would argue that this article constitutes a "factual error", but you could also just send a good, old-fashioned complaint.
Or, maybe a "suggestion" about where they can stick their doctored statistics.
Give 'em hell. A few thousand complaints should show them that we won't let propaganda like this proliferate.
- BMO
This article mentions Amiga peripherally at best, yet it's an "amiga topic". Am I missing something? QNX was proposed, and then dropped as an Amiga partner a while ago, weren't they? I think we've got enough confusion about what the Amiga is and isn't without mentioning some OS that was tied to what was a very different Amiga corporation a few years ago.
- Ben
junkmail@psychomantis.net