I'm not a 'hard-core' arcade fan, and the 2nd hand cab I am mameing is almost as old as I am. However, I spent a lot of time with arcade machines in the 90's and have nothing but good memories of that time (Gauntlet, Golden Axe, Double Dragon, etc...).

But I have to agree that the "arcade industry" is on it's way out in the general case, because the console market
is what they were always going to turn into anyway. Every new product starts off being this completely customised thing, with craft and love put into making each one (and a huge price tag to match). Then eventually someone works out how to mass-produce it and it becomes a commodity. Many of these companies that you lament for are
still making games, still using their creativity and enthusiasm for your enjoyment, only now it's the supply chain that has changed. Trains -> Cars, Mainframes -> PCs, Arcades -> Consoles.

This so called group of "People" who are allegedly being led astray by MAME have
already voted (ie. this discussion is academic). They have said loud and clear that they don't want to
have to buy a new 20" monitor (or CPU) with every game they buy, or pay $40 to finish a game once instead of $80 to finish a game as many times as they want (and then lend it to a friend), when they could buy 30 games, 1 console and 1 huge plasma screen TV for the same price. Jamma and the like were a step in the right direction, but the massive drop in consumer TV (and CPU) prices to me heralded the end of the TRON-esque arcade era since it's just not *cost effective* to link in all these components to a single game. Sure, they will still hang around (just like Apple Macs), but as an exception to the mass-market like this site right here. As a kid I bought Donkey Kong, Greenhouse and a few other games as individual units. Now I have a GBA with these kind of games as *cartridges*. Where is your outrage for kids not getting the classic hearing-aid battery games anymore?

Now, as many people have pointed out there is a niche market still available because the two key exceptions to this rule are custom hardware and friends. At least while both of these can't be made in large numbers super cheaply (yet)...
