From reading their posts, I can only come to one conclusion.
Commodore USA isn't a business, it's a get rich quick scheme. If it had been a business, there would have been more effort placed in making the Amiga stand out from the rest of Today's computing world through hardware, software, and user interface diferentation. Okay, Hyperion is threatening to sue if Commodore USA uses an Amiga OS alike. They can either use MorphOS or AROS with Natami and call Hyperion's bluff (And it absolutely
is a bluff; by now all patents on AmigaOS Calls have expired, and documentation on any hypothetically copyright infringing code is trivially simple to verify or disporve) or they can build the computer Jay Miner would have built if he were around today, and without even looking at anything at Intel.
On paper, my
Hibana series of computers seem rather expensive to make, but in actuallity, most of the real heavy lifting is already done. MIPS, Imagination Technologies, Renesis, Adapteva, Lucid Technologies, Texas Instruments, Achronix, Quallcomn/Bigfoot Networks, Micron Technologies, RAMBUS, all those companies and their respective IP exist right now. Even the Apollo CPU core now exists in a form tangible enough to start taking orders on. All that's needed (at most) is manipulating blocks of transistors to fit on dies. (Okay, an RLD3 RAM Controller will need to be designed from scratch, but that isn't too onerous) The only "custom" chip that really needs effort on is the extended AMY or PAULA chips, but even then the original articles
are out there in the wild. I mean, how much effort would it be to hook one of those up to a data analyzer, then expand and extend it as I talked about?
The software side of things will be harder to wrangle together, since they would need to hire conplier writers first, but once that's over with, things should pregress remarkably smoothly. For one thing, every standard text on D and Scala speak of code length reductions of at least 80% and often as much as 95%.
And as for motherboards, well, until they can aford a factory of their own, they can always contract out to the likes of Pegatron and ASRock for R&D and production.
But that's just the way I see it. Am I missing anything?