stopthegop wrote:
The marketing is easy. Hire the experts. Bill Gates, more than anyone else in history, has demonstrated the power of good advertising. Marketing is best left to the professionals. Regardless of what it costs, a good marketing strategy is worth it. Sign up for the old platinum account at Ogilvy & Mather (or other top firm) shovel a truckload of cash into a "flood the airwaves" style marketing campaign, and you're set. You could be peddling total garbage (Like Gates) and it would still reap 7 figure sales. The public (especially American) have proved this time and again.
Now this is what people seem to miss. And its mainly the purists who see Amiga as OS4. With enough funding trash can turn into treasure and sure as hell Amiga is looking trashy right now.
With fresh marketing, a new box and perhaps only backed up by a simple idea that, perhaps doesn't even do something new, but perhaps makes something easier, you'll see it snapped up and incorporated into lives like the DVD player or iPod. It all smells a little bit like convergence... but lets face it, iPod are making loads of cash out of what once sounded like one of the biggest cons of the IT boom. (iPod = the portable storage, music player, movie player, podcasts, photo album... mobiles = voice, video, camera, GPS etc.)
A company with a fresh idea, coupled with an inhouse scalable operating system plus links with hardware companies who can build systems for you... you could manufacture and deploy a new device with reduced licensing cost. Its the perfect springboard. Is this what Bill McEwen is trying to shape?
You ask on what hardware a new Amiga might run? I myself favor completely redesigned hardware made to look and "feel" like a classic Amiga -- not some stock, "me too" vanilla PPC board with an "Amiga" bios. A radical new design, something totally outside the box -- so much so that the it would be impossible for the inbread technology press to ignore it.
A flashy design saving an embattled brand of computing. Can you say Apple?

Jarrod.