the Amiga to make it smaller. We want the Amiga to grow." It was obvious that he felt these questions were already answered by the fact that Gateway 2000 had bought the Amiga. Gateway 2000 has no intention of backing away from the Amiga. They know the Amiga offers them opportunities and possibilities they cannot get through the PC marketplace. What bothers the doubting Thomases of this industry is that Gateway will not telegraph their moves and tell the world what they are doing. Apparently the Amiga market has been spoiled by a group of "bidders" who talked a lot but did nothing when the bids were to be placed. Gateway 2000 has built their reputation in a different arena. Their work has been to have machines ready for shipment when announced. The Amiga is now in the big leagues with big league players and the one thing that can hurt us is if this waiting fever continues. The problem with this thinking is that it is exactly this inactivity in the marketplace that will keep Gateway silent. Why should Gateway chance anything with the Amiga if its own developers don't think enough of it to sell their goods and provide help to their customers. Its time to fish or cut bait. It is time we all found ways to spark the Amiga market place