Well, it would be useful if there was an Amiga App Store style thing (e.g., to download games from the various Amiga freeware/abandonware game sites; access aminet; etc). If GigE is pennies more than 100mbit then it sounds like there's a purpose to it.
In the end it depends on the cost of the final board. I think there's room for both an FPGAArcade and a Natami (later on, when it's complete) in my life though.
They are for different markets for sure.
The Replay (fpgaarcade) board will have a connector for standard arcade controllers (JAMMA or is it JAMBA) and is not specifically for the Amiga market. It can be a slightly souped up Amiga for sure but it's performance is below the goals of NATAMI.
Natami is designed to be an Amiga PC. It will have a PCI slot(s) and a cpu slot, ethernet and USB and 256MB or ram or more. I can't recall if it will have SATA or PATA IDE.
here is a quote from Thomas the designer:
http://www.natami.net/knowledge.php?b=6¬e=28597&z=XyqlpyThe boards are not in production right now. But they are close to. Designing the MX board took much longer than I expected. There are only "small" changes to the LX board. But they increased the complexity very much. There are now four memory chips on board instead of two. And I removed one PCI connector to make room for two on-board PCI components (USB and LAN). For that the board has now six layers instead of four.
I'd much rather have ethernet and USB onboard rather than have to waste 2 PCI slots for them.
This is a positive delay.
@Piru
I don't see similarities to the Boxer at all. The BoXeR looks like a PC board with an fpga to emulate AGA and a connector for a 68k or PPC cpu. Natami is a re-implimentation of an actual Amiga design with bottlenecks removed and enhancements made where they can be.
In truth I wish all Amiga projects could work together and share assets for even faster delivery of products. Licensing models do work against this though.