A more interesting question is would any of us actually be interested in a modern Amiga? The Amiga is part of an Elvis Presley/Marilyn Monroe world. It died young and better than anything out there. Or Perhaps James Dean. At any rate, the Amiga we know and love is frozen in time, it's a solid '80s computer in what is almost the '10s..
Would any of us love an Amiga that ran on eight core Xeon chips, had a BSD base, required at least 2 GB of RAM and used 512 Meg NVidia GForce 9500 video cards? Isn't part of the charm of the Amiga that we use last century ideas like Megabytles of RAM, hard disks smaller than a DVD and floppy disks?