Umm...are those the only relevant Amiga parties out there?
Well I only quoted a few. I know apart from Jerri, Dave (Haynie) was one of them, Hyperion I think, and I think two of the other board makers Genesi and Acube had been contacted also...can't remember the exact details but it was something like that. I believe all the relevant parties were contacted probably just before the December post about the 'Final Challenge'.
Also I'd been backtracking reading some of the ideas and comments from December. I came across this one from Dan Wood back in December which I think makes sense and gives a really compelling reason for AmigaOS now to be ported over to x86:
'Assuming this is serious, this is what I want.
Work with Hyperion to port/update OS4 to modern standards firstly. It must be x86 to be taken seriously in this day and age, run 68k apps in a sandboxed fully compatible, seamless UAE environment (like unity mode, invisible to the user), run PPC apps via a Rosetta-style virtualization. Add memory protection to the OS and run these old apps in a sandboxed environment, new x86 apps can take advantage of MP, make sure it can run AROS apps so we already have a starting point. Basically bring AROS and OS 4 together, but bring it up to date.
Put it in a nice box with the Commodore Amiga name bearing proudly down at you, give it a custom kb with the A keys....
That'll do nicely and stands a chance of being taken seriously outside of our community, of course it can also run Windows/Linux should the user wish to.'
This is his idea obviously, (and a Power7 Amiga would also be nice), but the question remains in the hands of Hyperion et al how they want to go about it and whether they're willing to port AOS over to the x86 platform or work with AROS on developing a version of AOS fit for x86 chips. This is the crux of the matter everyones faced with today (and the past two decades including Commodore). But it can be solved technically. If Hyperion doesn't want any other PC system to be an 'Amiga clone', Hyperion could develop a version of the OS that will recognise some sort of 'dongle' or code on the board. This will make the system uniquely Amiga in a similar style to how OSX recognises proper Macs.