tl;dr warning
Just wish people would give more support to projects like FPGA Arcade and NatAmi. If there's a true successor to the Amiga legacy, it's these guys like Mike/Yaqube and and the NatAmi team down there in the trenches with soldering irons and compilers blazing. And yes, I say that as someone who paid for a SAM 440, which I do enjoy. In this day and age, we gotta root for the little guys and those that came before them, like Georg Braun (GB 1000) and Dennis van Weeren (Minimig). The FPGA Arcade and NatAmi should fill a huge gap in the market, providing a top performing "legacy" style Amiga that can be used for more than just games. Will the price be high, compared to a 3.5ghz windows PC? I am sure it will, since you can buy a well equipped x86 PC for a few hundred bucks off the shelf. This is a hobby market, and no one can complete against the big guns price wise. I'll pay a premium for a good niche product.
The C-USA products are Intel/x86 PC's. No more, no less. Any sales, hype or buzz they make won't further our causes or best interests and Commodore fans and the respect for the legacy of said products. While I have no love for their business practices, I wish them well - but anyone thinking that C-USA will bring Commodore back from the dead and into the mainstream is delusional. What they sell are commodity PC's running Linux. No bashing here, plain facts. They aren't selling any more "magic" than any other PC maker slapping commodity hardware in a shiny case.
You are buying a Linux PC from them, wth the promise they will release some form of integrated and seamless emulation solution, C64 OR Amiga. You can obtain that yourself at a far lower cost with far better performance, but I am sure C-USA's products will appeal to some and I wish said buyers the best, sincerely.