Hi Wayne,
Didn't Jeri sell like over a million of those C64 Joysticks on QVC?
It was some good number, but you're forgetting one very important point.
Jeri didn't build a computer. She built a way to play all your old favorite C64 games in a joystick form.
I think we might all be surprised the number of lurkers that hold Amiga fondly in their hearts who would buy a new computer if it was released.
Unless that machine is comparable to what is currently available in the PC and/or Mac world both on a price and performance level, then I'm afraid you'd be in for a bit of disappointment.
Most people cannot fathom paying $2k (or even 1k)+ for a desktop machine with an unsupported OS that runs slower than their $399 laptop from Dell. Dedicated hobbyists, sure, but they're not "normal" where the average computer buyer is concerned.
Build the Amiga on a joystick, add in the top 50 games and/or a way to import them off of SD memory card and yeah, it'd sell a few hundred thousand at best, but that's still not enough, because it's sales/impact would be a short-lived event and there's not much to follow that up with...
Everyone these days wants real computers, or wants popular and expandable game consoles (XBox PS3, Wii, etc) but no one wants an underpowered, overpriced desktop solution with zero software support.
Sorry to be so brutal, and yes, you'd think as "the Amiga.org guy" I'd be a little more supportive, but I've been fighting this fight to no avail for 15 years now and still no one (except maybe Dammy and AROS) "gets it".
Wayne