You really think they care that much? The computer world is driven by one concept; Cheap and powerfull... that is all.
@bloodline
Actually I think they care a great deal indeed, their future depends on making the right choice and as I keep saying their political leadership may be accused of a lot of things but not stupidity. They know they are standing on the breach of truely major change and they do not want to stuff things up.
They will steer a middle course, settle on a technology which is connected to the rest of world but does not make them subject to the whims of others. Dragon was something they did precisely to show their independence and it will be kept in reserve.
Their problems are not the same as the "wests" they need something which can operate reliably in a small village with a generator as well as something powerful enough to be used as server farm. They will avoid the top-end of advanced design and go for something which is already in ordinary use and it will not be X86.
They are not just looking for a good chip design, but as I said before a stable of chips which already have the manufacturing capacity to feed their market while not dominating other aspects of use.
They will be going Linux, especially if the Japanese have anything to do with it and Koreans and Twainese are likewise minded. They also see this is a contest with the US and MS as part of that. While they are looking at building a very Asian basis for future technology growth.
You have to take everything into account, and when you do things narrow down a hell of a lot.
By the way, I bought my first Amiga because of the AREXX ports and the multi-tasking the A500 looked like a processing whimp compared to the mighty early Mac it stood next to, then A3000 when it was new and the new MacII still did a little better in processing speed - I sold the MacII , I did not sell the A3000 - when it broke I went to a PC to bide my time (my new A1 G4 arrives this week).