@SteffJay I am sorry, I have no X5000, so I cannot see it. Only downloads of registered systems are visible. Did you registred your AmigaOS 4.1FE on Hyperion? Here areyour registered systems. Here should be download of AmigaOS 4.1FE.
Please, an some X5000 user confirm, if dowloads are on Hyperion site?
AmigaOS3: Amiga 1200 AmigaOS4: Micro A1-C, AmigaOne XE, Pegasos II, Sam440ep, Sam440ep-flex, AmigaOne X1000 MorphOS: Efika 5200b, Pegasos I, Pegasos II, Powerbook, Mac Mini, iMac, Powermac Quad
Surely there is a way to modify the installation routine to automatically adjust the kicklayout file for owners of X5000 and X1000, instead of using this risky method of expecting the user to make the changes manually.
And, yes, keep a copy of the original kicklayout file just in case.
It's not perfect, but you should have a USB stick at the least with your X5000, and you should be able to boot into the boot menu. Yes, the incompatibility of some keyboards is annoying.
Anyway, that is just my opinion. I see though: it is not particularly user friendly unless all the planets align.
If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear. George Orwell.
Surely there is a way to modify the installation routine to automatically adjust the kicklayout file for owners of X5000 and X1000
Of course there is, and this has also been discussed, e.g. back when preparing Update 2.
But there are so many ways a Kicklayout file can look (I have one with 25 different active configs - yes, in one file), and so much that can go wrong, so in the end it was decided not to try it.
Maybe one day someone will get the idea to write a simple GUI tool to maintain Kicklayout files; if anybody bites, I'm willing to test and make suggestions etc.
Of course, the whole thing is a bit annoying if you just want to get your system up and running, as in our example.
To be honest, you should not change anything on the recovery USB stick as it is for emergencies and you can get back your system that is no longer working. I personally like the idea of the recovery USB stick and I also got it when I bought my X5000.
Can AmigaOs4.1 also be booted from a USB-CDRom? I haven't tried this myself.
MacStudio ARM M1 Max Qemu//Pegasos2 AmigaOs4.1 FE / AmigaOne x5000/40 AmigaOs4.1 FE
Yeah. Many years of testing (alpha, beta, RC) and having to be able to fall back etc. Maybe half of them are not in use any more, but I keep them so I don't have to get used to new numbers/letters to press in the AmigaBoot menu.
A fresh OS4.2 iso will solve all these problems :)
There is another scenario when updated kickstart modules and kicklayouts becomes problematic.
I don't always have my kickstart folder in sys:kickstart
But having an "novice" mode and advanced mode would be better for kickstart configurations where novice mode would be used most of the time with a standard kickstart-layout that just works.
The problem with these "solves most normal situations" solutions is that they don't necessarily.
Say you have just two boot partitions, one for daily use and one for fallback. And you have the Kicklayout covering both in the first one's Kickstart dir. Some smart friend has set those up for you, and you know that when you make an update, and something goes wrong, you can always boot the fallback system and fix it (or get help to fix it).
So if you run this update on the daily partition, you certainly don't want a sed line to change both your configurations in your one Kicklayout file, because then your fallback system is dead in the water. The line in Kicklayout now refers to p50x0, but you still have the old p5020 file in the fallback's Kickstart.
Situations like this are the reason for the decision not to try doing the update automatically.
Believe me, it was a lengthy discussion, and much can be said for both opinions, but in the end, that's how the decision was taken.