Well it's obvious that as a big brand consumer item the Amiga has been a long time dead. I don't get why you think age has anything to do with buying a computer regularly nor what it has to do with a revitalisation of the brand name. I know plenty of folk aged 50+ that constantly buy new computers or laptops (PC's)
agreed. My very first computer may have been an Amiga 2000 in 1989, but I have had more since then. Including another Amiga that I regularly used to make web pages, and write articles about ImageFX for an online magazine (which I got PAID for). AND make various animations for projects - which I got PAID for.
Imagine that! Amiga's can generate income.

plus, there's another subtle point that many people seem to miss. I'll try to explain but no guarantee that i will succeed.
When I got my Amiga there were no classes on computer animation/graphics. I learned how to do all that On MY Amiga. In my own time. Eventually I moved to LA which had a ton of computer (Amiga) groups at the time and I learned a bit from those people. But I also walked in there knowing a lot about what I had learned using DeluxePaint and AdPro and ImageFX, etc.
Here's the subtle part: Because the Amiga could multitask REALLY well, I learned how to have a certain work flow that continues to this day no MATTER WHICH OS I happen to be using. MAC, Linux, Windows....whatever. Amiga habits live on.
I used those same Amiga work habits when I did special effects. I became very good at figuring out software Because I had started out using an Amiga. When I went for jobs which used proprietary software, i impressed the potential employers with my VERY fast learning curve on software that I had never seen before. And I'm talking about MINUTES.
All that and more is possible because the Amiga is a great teaching machine. People may think the Amiga is "dead", but not in my life, it ain't.
I may not have touched an actual Amiga machine in a while, but the Amiga way of THINKING is in my head and it's not going anywhere.
It has left it's mark forever.