Perhaps we should all just enjoy the legacy of Amiga and leave it at that? There is no shame in being the owner of a vintage 1985 computer than annihilated EVERYTHING for sale to home or business users on the day of launch by such a huge margin that the owning company didn't even have a clue how to describe it to people weened on rubbish Mac/PC DOS/ST/8bit 
I personally think that's the best way for the Amiga to remain...

To me currently the only real option of a NEW Amiga that would even come close to being like the legacy Amiga is the NatAmi. If the NatAmi ever becomes a reality then that is probably the only NEW type of Amiga I would purchase, providing it lives up the the specs and claims of it's developers.
If it did then it would mean we could have...
1: A new modern (not second hand) piece of hardware that is 100% backwards compatible with the Amiga...
2: Runs faster without having to scour the likes of ebay and pay ridiculous prices for an old accelerator board that you can't even guarantee will be working...
3: Has new & better GFX modes that programers could learn about and write new software to take advantage of...
4: Make available the ease of use of adding things like USB/ HDs/ DVD Drives etc... without the need to try and find add on hardware controller boards...
5. It can be programmed they way it should be in M68k Assembler, as there are still plenty of talented coders around who could write new stuff to take advantage of it's new features or just create new progs to take advantage of it's increased speed...
6: It would be very easy for anyone with the slightest bit of previous experience of ever using an Amiga to pick up and be able to use it comfortably without having to figure out much about it.
To me that would be the best way for the Amiga to go forward as there is no need or indeed point for it to even attempt to try and compete with the world of PCs & Macs as it never would be able to anyway, but then you never know stranger things have happened...
