Absolutley no disrepect intended to AROS developers: I can imagine how much hard work it is to maintain distributions for specific systems, the key to a viable business is having a current product that is available and in demand. AROS Devs are always reactively developing their system to x86 hardware that has hit the retail shelves already, so hardware quickly becomes discontinued.
Despite the long time AROS has been available since late 1990's, I do not see a plethora of AROS retailers out there and a lot of AROS machines sold. I expect the AROS team continue development from a love of the original Amiga spirit, as we all do. However if you think that x86 Amiga is the future, why has AROS not attracted a significant market share yet? Is it because of the pace of keeping up with x86 hardware changes?
I had contact to former Amiga developers to get permissions, many were former AmigaOS user but were not interested to spend the money for new PPC hardware and had no faith in Hyperions strategy. Sadly, they most left the market and did not change f.e. to MorphOS. Where is the "success" of current strategy. It is astonishing that such a expensive hardware sales at all but I see not that the userbase grows or will grow.
Regarding AROS I have a different view. Look at the userbase. Many have left at all, those who are still there have mostly decided for a platform a long time ago, they have their software and are mostly emotionally tied to it. And to win real new users all camps lack features. Aros with 64bit, SMP in some form, driver support by Linux, 128 GB RAM support and so on might bridge the gap.
The main problem (for all camps) to win real new users is missing software. And outside the community nobody knows that the platform is still there (no marketing)