OMG!!! :lol:
Did you even think that through before hitting the "submit reply" button? 

*Ahem* I don't appreciate being insulted and addressed in a patronising manner. I did logically think this through: For roughly the same price as a brand new X1000, I could buy a POWER8 server ( The PA6T is based on POWER5, for reference, and that is 5 revisions behind the POWER8, counting the + revisions ) I am seriously getting something worth every penny I pay, compared to the X1000, which is using 10-year old tech and passing it off as a new system.
With A-Eon's investment of more than 1 million dollars to Vari-Sys to design and build PPC motherboards for running AmigaOS4.x (and possibly some embedded markets), I don't see them changing directions any time soon, or switching to a different company to do design work, or manufacture boards for future A-Eon computers.
All very good points, but if Varisys doesn't offer hardware that is cost-effective to build, and performs poorly, what's the point? Besides you and a few others, I don't know anyone who even owns an X1000, let alone laid eyes on it. I'm sure they were the best option when A-EON was founded by far, but you have to jump ship if the current one is leaking. I can't imagine Trevor and A-EON have made much in terms of profits, and while I know none of those involved in OS4 do it for the money, I can't have expected them to survive long running a deficit, especially with the banks so reluctant to lend money.
I yesterday bought a notebook with 2 core 2.7 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 500 GB Harddisk, GPU, WIFI and so on incl. Win 8 for 238 EUR (used). There is nothing that can compete right now with such offerings.
Sorry to burst your delusion, but there are:
http://elinux.org/Jetson_TK1I have experience with that board above, and it is a wonderful board that I have been given the pleasure of using, for free, for work purposes. It is quite powerful, not to mention inexpensive, and performs probably twice as good as your laptop's integrated graphics pipe, and depending on the CPU generation, comparable or better than the CPU.
Not exactly the cheapest ARM board out there, but definitely a winner in terms of cost/performance. I also bought a BeagleBone Black for $55+$11 shipping, and that is no slouch either, I have it running Gentoo until my friend, the developer of Void Linux and a former NetBSD developer, ports Void to it. It is very fast, about 4-6 times the speed of a Raspberry Pi, which is about the speed of a 300MHz Pentium II. Do the math, and you can tell it blows the transistors off of a Pentium III running at 1GHz, which I have running PFSense here, especially in power consumption.
I'd love to benchmark the TK1 against an old Mac Mini G4, I suspect that since it has twice the RAM, many times the bus speed, a faster CPU and GPU, it will beat it at nearly every record. When Project Denver, the ARM64 Tegra comes out, it will do better than almost every Intel Atom and likely a G5 CPU in terms of performance.
x86_64 is so messed up, that it has literally 63 different instructions that can perform the jump operation. An audit against the instructions used by the Linux kernel to the instructions present in a modern x86 CPU, in hardware or microcode, came to be roughly 1 instruction used by Linux for every 10 the CPU offered. And it has to maintain that massive instruction set, either in hardware or microcode, in addition to anything else AMD or Intel wants to cram into the chip. The patent-protections on these chips prevents third-party compilers, such as GCC and Clang, from fully utilising the instruction sets, forcing you to either use a proprietary compiler and the OS it will run on to build your OS and programs, or else contend with only being able to utilise a fraction of a chip's instructions.
The problem, I will remind you, with using the x86 architecture as a base, are the following:
The hardware is so diverse that with the tiny size of the community, only a small subset of that hardware will ever be supported. The BSD community, which is at least 4 times as big as the Amiga community, has trouble with this on almost every system built today. Your average GNU/Linux distro that doesn't use blob drivers not merged into the Linux kernel only supports about half the computers out there to satisfactory level, adding blobs from Nvidia or AMD raises it to about 70-80%. The GNU/Linux-libre distros? Less than 10%.
The Amiga community won't be able to utilise blobs, because Nvidia, AMD, Realtek, Intel etc. won't write them, unless you're referring to the Linux-hosted version of AROS, so you can count on their support being less than 10%, even in a unified state.
Furthermore, most members here don't even use AmigaOS or an OS that in any way resembles Amiga OS, the majority uses Windows, with lesser minorities using OS X and GNU/Linux, and then you have the esoteric ones like me who use BSD, IRIX and Solaris, operating systems most people aren't even aware exist. So what's the point? Most are on here to discuss WinUAE or maintaining old hardware, so one could argue that the apathy and lack of participation among userbases would effectively stifle any effort to modernise the OS or the hardware underlying it, let alone UNIFY it. You're kidding yourself if the switch to x86 will do anything other than piss in the well of the users who sunk money into NG hardware, frustrate new users with lack of hardware support, and fragment the community even more, and perhaps even cause MorphOS or OS4 to be forked again, making yet more players into a market the size of a quark.