falemagn: There won't be other productions of existing designs unless there's demand - there's no demand if the hardware keeps being the crappy hardware it is.
Exactly.
MikeyC: There will be new designs of that I am sure.
Nobody even remotely connected to Amiga will design them -- only recycle them.
MikeyC: The hardware isn't crappy, my Micro A1 is brill, everything works on it as it should
My Celeron 400 works as it should, too, but that didn't stop me from replacing it with an Athlon 1600+, and then a high-end P4.
To people who have had to deal with 50Mhz CPUs for a decade, PPC seems like a miracle. Those of us with real hardware know better. I see no point in using oddball hardware if it works no better than, say, a vanilla Athlon system. There are plenty of MicroATX PC systems to choose from, and most of them blow away the Micro AmigaOne.
Then again, I do actual work. I'm not the kind of person who's satisfied browsing the Internet, using AIM, and playing cheezy Flash games all day like the bottom 90% of computer owners. Do Amigans fall into that class of people? If so, they aren't the same DeluxePainting, ProTracking, FredFishing, public-domaining community I grew up with, that's for sure.
falemagn: It's overpriced, if it costed around $200 (no more) I would consider it.
Well, it would have to be more than that given that it comes with a CPU, and they need extra insurance because of the small volume. Macs have never been cheap, either.
I still say it would have been nice if Amiga had chosen just one x86 chipset and graphics card to support. At the very least, it gives a whole lot of CPU choices.
falemagn: No, I wouldn't buy a pegasos either, but I'm sure it would be certainly more attractive than the Aone.
The price bracket is about the same. The Pegasos II may not have the same bugs as the AmigaOne due to the different chipsets, but they have most the same technical shortcomings.
falemagn: Considering that porting AOS4 to the peg would certainly increase sales on the desktop...
Another grand advantage to Amiga on x86: less petty politics.
Kronos: Define "sold at a loss".
No net profit.
Prototype runs, defective products, returns, unsold product, storage, shipping, advertising, service, tech support, middlemen, developer support, legal crap...
Hardware is a cutthroat business. You can't do low-level and high-level stuff at the same time unless you're rich.
Seehund: Well, insane times take insane measures.
Will there ever be sane times?
Seehund: Perhaps Hyperion will have better luck getting a reply from AInc. 
Yeah, what are partners for? :-)