I can understand the skepticism, but the outright hate that is being thrown at this is silly. For example, Piru. Yes, they violated copyright. It happens all the time. Big companies do it, small companies do it, and virtually every individual in the developed world does it. You did it when you made the post complaining about it.
Also, VingtTrois. You might not believe that they are on the up and up, but claiming that a company who is advertising a C64 replica case has nothing to do with Commodore is disingenuous.
To everyone complaining that they are a furniture company... That isn't a bad thing. None of the electronics companies are going to touch this kind of a project. The fact that an existing business would pick it up is a positive sign. Yes, it may be a small business, but it indicates that it isn't someone sitting in their basement thinking they can collect a few checks and then disappear. Obviously, this is someone that wants to see Commodore computers back out on the market.
Yes, CommodoreUSA started out in a questionable fashion, but so do a lot of businesses. Sure, from the sounds of it, they were taking stock machines, slapping on a different label and then reselling it. That is the way the x86 industry (as well as many others) has worked since day one. Ok, not day one, but it started before the 286 was even released.
If a CommodoreUSA releases a PC in a replica C64 case, and it is not totally botched, they will have added something very useful to the retro computing industry. I know that I would buy one if the price was even close to reasonable. I bought a MiniMig, I bought a C-One, and I will buy a FPGA Arcade. If a replica case was available for the MiniMig and/or the FPGA, I would buy those as well. If a replica Amiga case was available with an x86 inside, I would seriously consider it.
Emulation on a lot of these systems is good enough at this point that with the right start up setup, many people wouldn't be able to identify that they were not the original machines. I would like that. Just as I like WinUAE and Vice. If the PC64 does make it to market, and it fits the case right, and all the keys work, the last piece that I would really hope they do is include a tiny bootable USB thumbdrive with a stripped down Linux. Just enough to run Vice, and they set it up to to autoload Vice.
It would be a beautiful thing to be able to buy a brand new C64, where it boots up and runs just like the original, but if you pull the tiny thumb drive out of the back and reboot, it is a full x84 computer.