1994... My Amiga was either boxed or sold, as I bought a 486 somewhere in 1993.
My Amiga was an A500 rev 5 with KS 1.2, a KCS Power PC Board (a superb card), a Macrosystem Evolution SCSI controller with 80 MB drive, a Supraram 2 MB expansion, a Multivision 500 flicker fixer, an A1010 external diskdrive, a Star LC24-10 printer, a Tornado 2400 modem and a 14" SVGA screen.
It was a nice system, but when I finally reached the above configuration, I still wasn't really satisfied with it. It either needed heavy upgrading or complete replacement to make it more like I wanted it to be. It wasn't capable of running the software I wanted to use and peecees were improving very, very fast in those days.
As I noticed I mainly used the Power PC Board on my Amiga, running MS-DOS 5.0, when it was time to buy a new system I finally bought a (back then) very fast pc in 1993:
a 486DX2/66 with 8 MB ram, Viper VLB videocard with 2 MB ram, Soundblaster 16ASP soundcard, a Zoom 14k4 internal modem, 245 MB IDE-drive, all in a nice minitower, and a HP LaserJet 4L printer.
I have been using that pc for years, constantly upgrading and a expanding it: expanding ram to 32 MB, upgrading the cpu to a P24T/83, adding a wavetable card, an Adaptec AHA2742 with a Quantum Empire 1080, cdrom drive, etc. It was the first computer I used the internet on, I guess somewhere in 1996 or 1997, running Windows 95.
Its last use was as a router, running Smoothwall 0.99 with two 3Com509 network cards, and it has been used like that from 2002 up to about 2004 or 2005 after which its power supply went bust. Great machine.
And yes, I liked Windows 95. And I still do. It was a huge improvement compared to Win 3.1, pushing computers to a new era. I know most of what Win95 could do, was possible on other operating systems (such as the Amiga), but it pushed multimedia, plug & play, the internet and a very usable user interface to the masses, for which it deserves praise.
Nowadays, I have a plethora of computers in my computer room, ranging from the C64 (my first computer) to multicore, multi Ghz machines with GBs of ram and TBs of drivespace, running all kinds of old and new operating systems. I like it that way.