@darkglobe
You are right, at the moment the AmigaOne is an expensive way to run linux compared to a machine that can be built using x86 technology.Compared to the Mac it is actually quite competative, at leat in my part of the world.
However, OS4 is not that far off, and those hyperion guys have been bending over backwards to produce a high quality product.While it may lack some of the "features" other OS's may provide, I find I use less than 10% of them anyway, and like you said, end up re-insatalling many many times over.I would be very surprised and extremely disappointed if this was also the case with OS4.
One thing to note though, is that the AmigaOne systems you can buy from Eyetech come with OS4 for free at this point, supplied when OS4 is released.
Things are moving forward, and a new era for the Amiga is soon to begin.
As much as the pegasos seems to be aquality product, the truth of the matter is that it is not an amiga.Nor is Morphos Amiga, though it is "Amiga like" to many people.It is yet not fully commercial standard product in my opinion either.Despite emotional reasonings, the Pegasos and Morphos machines are a competing product to the AmigaOne and when it is release OS4.
All that aside, the Pegasos and Morphos would have been the successors to the Amiga legacy by default.
That is of course until Amiga Inc. came along and bought Amiga Technologies from Gateway.I think you are a bit harsh on these guys in what they have managed to acomplish. Without them there would be no AmigaOne, and there would be no OS4 even in the state it is atm.OF course this could not have been done without eyetech and hyperion, but it was Amiga Inc. that made this happen.They have done more than any company since commodore with far far less resources.
I think the entire computer industry is heading towards a major time of turbulance where just about anything can happen, with the renewed competiveness of Mac' and the PPC platform in general, the advent of the 970, Linux gainin popularity at an impressive rate with many governments around the world moving towards linux, and businesses too, the dawning of 64 bit technology to the desktop, the entire TCPA/palladium controvesy, mixed with a truckload of consumer dis-satisfaction with the choices they have, and the performance, cost and reliablity of accepted products, not to mention the whole upgrade merry-go-round.Not to mention the attempted resurgance of Amiga, start ups like the pegasos and many other things to lengthly to mention.
Personally, what I have atm will last about another 12 months, by which time things should have sorted themselves out on the Amiga front, I would certainly wait at least a few months after OS4 is released to write off the Amiga.