I'm aware of that, but you see less support under native mode than you do under Linux. I used to have a box dedicated to running AROS, but on my ThinkPad, it's a no-go.
My personal opinion is that (Well, I feel like tomatoes are going to be thrown at me for saying this) while AROS does well with focusing on 3.1 source compatibility, and while the original AmigaOS most definitely had its strengths, I couldn't really envision it as anything that's really ready for the 21st century. I would personally like to see something along the lines of the concepts of AmigaOS and intuition being injected into an existing *NIX-based OS distribution, and leaving behind backwards compatibility. It wouldn't be an /easy/ task, but I think think it would be, at the very least, doable and interesting. Not to mention that you could reap the benefits of thousands upon thousands of existing device drivers and such...
Take a *NIX distribution, develop a custom windowing system, re-work the filesystem layout, commands, and the feedback/syntax of commands to mimic the AmigaDOS shell, but while taking advantage of the heightened security and user privilege system, among other things...
The overall concensus is still, these days, the mainstream user just isn't ready for a *NIX-based OS that runs on common PC hardware. (Okay, I'll admit I'm shooting for the moon here, and not really taking myself too seriously), but something like say... "Intuix" or whatever it would be called...would at least be a good step closer...
A very unlikely proposal, but hey, one can always dream and try to get better at C in the process, can't they?
