@drwho-
I'll agree, somewhat. Certainly with the problems you mention in #1. C= used standards when it felt like it, and then threw them out in the most annoying of places. The styled and proprietary case screws were certainly not brilliant design. Keyboards are another gripe of mine. The AT keyboard port had been standardized for how long? Long enough that the A2000/3000 used the same port (their cost savings), but a different pinout and keyboard controller, so you had to use an Amiga keyboard (stick it to the customer).
As for #2, I somewhat disagree. Sure, the A2000 was expensive in it's day. But look at what it was up against. It was still cheaper than a monochrome Macintosh.... And a PC back then was an AT or XT with CGA or monochrome. Maybe the high-end machines were 286s with EGA, but those were way more expensive than the A2000. And look how much more useful the A2000 was. It was a highly-usable, modern, color computer, while everything else on the consumer side of the market was junk. The A2000 was the affordable powerhouse of its day. Its only competitors on features were high-end workstations (SUN SGI, etc) that cost many thousands of dollars more. So really, I think they peddled 'em for pretty cheap, considering what everyone else was trying to do!