Hello!
I'm here again. :-)
Well, of course the Amiga is a hobbyist computer right now, or a hobby itself.
Please don't say: "I'm still using Amiga as the main computer for all of my tasks.", "I'm using my Amiga for taking care of my personal balance.", "I'm using my Amiga for editing my videos.".
Of course we can do all of this and more, but we are enthusiasts and we know how to cope with some problems and limitations we have on our system (sometimes we just not complain).
But speaking about Bob, the average user, he is not absolutely attracted by such a system, nor he will abandon his PC with Windows or Mac for the Amiga.
If you think that the main aim is stealing some quotes from the Windows and Mac user base, well, it's better for you to open your eyes on your Amiga and its situation.
This would be blindness and pure madness! We are not in the end of the 80s, nor in the 90s.
We should focus on maintaining the present (active) user base and maybe improving it regaining some "old" users that left for other systems: they would not abandon their present system completely (either Windows, Mac or Linux), but if the Amiga option is viable, not so costly and "positively seen", he/she will "try again".
But how could this be achived?
I won't stop saying this: we need a clear direction where to go, an official way forward, or better, "a widely recognized way" by the entire community (since Amiga Inc. has to be forgotten - I deleted its web site from my bookmarks as well).
That was the reason because I liked the idea of having Amiga OS 4.0 for 68k: it's an official release, working on real Amigas and under emulation, and so wide user base (so no MorphOS splits).
But during discussions we discovered that this won't happen for sure, as presently the lastest "official" Amiga OS, working on (few) PPC platforms is at a deadline: no Amiga Inc., no Hyperion, no future in this direction.
Maybe you can run OS 4.0 on MacMini, but this is just a nice geek trick and satisfaction (done with some stolen files AFAIK), and really not a way for going on.
What's "going on"?
Going on is new OS releases, new software releases, new hardware.
In this moment Amiga is really "retrocomputing", and not "present computing", and despite I like soooo much retrocomputing (C-64 rulez!

) ), this is something Amiga doesn't deserve.
It (or she

) still has some hidden powers for the making a better future in computing, something which is somehow even difficult to clearly explain... we just want to express our view about computing!
For what we discussed about it seems that AROS is the only hope for getting a new OS release for a wide user base, even if not in short time, with potential for evolve.
Once the 3.9 compatibility is got (at function level), we have a starting point and we can improve from there.
When hopefully UAE will be transparently integrated inside of it (in a VM or whatever), for getting Amiga legacy stuff to work, it could be released in various flavours: the main one (as from most AROS supporters) x86, 68k and PPC.
x86 for running the system on off-the-shelf components, on huge computing power machines; this would permit an easy "try again" to ex-Amiga users.
68k for running it on real Amigas (so without UAE) and hopefully Natami systems.
In this way the hardcore Amiga user will recognise AROS as an official release, and feel the continuity of the system, not switching to a completely new one.
And for Natami this would provide the system a join up into community, promoting it as a viable way for those who like so much OS and custom hardware integration and want to upgrade (this would need some cooperation between AROS developers and Natami responsibles of course, but could be done).
PPC flavour would be good for those who spent thousands euros on their systems in these years.
Would be nice to see inside the development environment of AROS, a clean and elegant way to compile your application for all the available platforms with just a few mouse clicks (maybe it's not as easy as it seems).
With this you may say that only "old people" from the 80s and early 90s will be interested and will use the system: well, we cannot ask for more than this right now.
Once we reached a better situation (if so), we'll see how to improve more.
Hear u 'n da future!
Luca "OgniX" \8^)
P.S. Please don't say "Please, port Amiga OS on the iPhone." otherwise I would ask "Port the Amiga OS on my kitty."!