Ask yourself the question.....why would Intel (big company as they are) have any interest in the Amiga?
Intel had no interest in the Amiga. You are pre-supposing that they did.
There is nothing in the Amiga that could help anybody make modern hardware.
All I can say is CELL and Xenon (the Xbox 360 CPU) are all PPC based processors, which in turn are improvements on the 680x0 line of processors.
The PPC doesn't have much in common with the 680x0, the first chips were IBM POWER chips that were shrunk, modified to use the 88000 bus and then manufactured under license by Motorola (Motorola's own RISC processor the 88000 didn't do very well so it made sense to go into business with IBM). PPC didn't come into the Amiga's history until after Commodore were dead & it only happened because Apple had made a similar transition (not because of simularities between the processors but because there was nothing else apart from Intel).
Windows 95 was Windows 3.1 with some tweaks, that was why OS/2 was arguably better (although it wasn't until OS/2 3.0 that you could say it was better with a straight face as the earlier versions were horrible). Windows NT was better than OS/2 & that was based on VMS, which predated the Amiga by a very long shot.
The only reason that Windows 95 existed at all is because Microsoft needed a new product and Windows NT was going to need more RAM than consumers were prepared to buy.