motorollin wrote:
1. Amiga Inc put together packages of cheap x86 systems running AmigaForever KXLight or AROS, with Hollywood or Scala and touch-screen and TV/VGA support built in.
2. These packages are marketed to manufacturers of multimedia display booths and interactive displays.
Well, i see another way, very similar to create cheap x86 systems running AmigaForever, why don't use the new Minimig, and AClone? It can have two markets, an Amiga TV joystick, and a small multimedia machine for museums, and you can share the costs of Minimig/AClone boards...
I had another idea, add genlock functions, and something like mandala board of vivid group and you will have a small eyetoy machine (or better, with chroma), and you will have a cheap and small machine for interactive multimedia presentations...
I'm working on a similar system (software based) for x86 systems with windows and a webcam, you can see something on my web...