I've never heard of them. There's ONE vendor on Amazon named "Revolutionary Books" with a 33% rating (3 reviews in the past 12 months) selling a Lemote netbook for $1500, and also for $2500? This is the architecture you think they should port to?? I seriously doubt you'd ever get one if you ordered from that Amazon vendor.
BeOS failed to right it's ship even after porting to x86 because their sales were atrocious and Apple did not save them. AmigaOS sales are atrocious now, so what's the difference? Hyperion somehow seems to survive by selling a handful of licenses (if that) per month, which Be could not do.
I'm not saying AmigaOS will survive long term by porting to x86, but it certainly won't survive on the path it's on now, and certainly would not survive if ported to ANOTHER obscure platform like you are suggesting.
I'm not a fan of the NG systems in general - I don't see the point, unless something unique can be brought to the table. But, if you're going to do SOMETHING, don't spend incredible resources to just move sideways like you are suggesting.
Amiga was different because it was better. There's nothing better about current NG systems, hardware or software - they are worse. Porting to an obscure platform does not change that. Porting to x86 could at least put them in the ballpark hardware wise, and resources could then be devoted to software instead.
Look what the move to x86 did for the Mac? Saved the platform. Of course the Amiga market doesn't have Apple-like resources, but with WinUAE a sandbox already exists to run classic apps on x86 - and that's half the battle.
AROS isn't successful because:
- It's not "blessed" with the Amiga name
- It tries to support generic x86 hardware and does not have "official" hardware behind it.
- There are not enough resources devoted to it.
Just an FYI, Amiga and BeOS objectively are two approaches to the same question " How simple can an OS be and still be useful? " neither is objectively better than the other. If you yourself aren't interested in NG Amiga hardware then you're doing nothing more than trolling this topic. Don't put out ideas that will potentially ruin what's left of the community if you have no intention of taking responsibility for your ideas, which your lack of interest clearly indicates.
Furthermore, you don't understand that putting a proprietary OS that lacks most features new users are familiar with on the same ballgame as Windows, OS X and GNU/Linux will result in them being trampled.
The reason the BSD communities are still around are that they mutually assist each other, are ported to several architectures which diversify the risk, and they aren't money driven.
Going after an idea with a gamble such as the entire OS and company at stake is an unacceptable risk, even if the supposed pay off is big. You wouldn't gamble your house in Las Vegas or Cancun Mexico if you had a wife and kids living there was the no second dwelling. As such, the Amiga community is spread too thin for diversifying to work. Instead there needs to be an affordable, high performance niche piece of kit which both NG solutions can agree to support.
There is just too much risk.