That is a really, really nice Amiga 3000 you have there. Congrats!
I have always thought it was the most sexy Amiga Commodore every made.
When I was in college I had one and people at the time were just blown away that a computer could have two different OSs on it!
If you read the Amiga 3000UX brochure, they mention a university that went with all Amiga 3000UX machines for their students because they wanted to standardize on a flavor of Unix. They even have quotes from a professor from the said university.
When I became a professor, I decided to track down that guy and ask about choosing the Amiga 3000UX, dealing with Commodore, and how their decision worked out.
The guy actually emailed me back with the following information:
-The machines were great and they were real workhorses for the everyone involved. Their failure rate was very low. Much lower than the compettion.
-Commodore went from being passionate about Amix to sort of dumping it which left them hanging. There were fewer updates, not upgrades, and they didn't make it work for any other machines.
-Commodore went bankrupt which was terrible for the university. They had to maintain those computers for the students/faculty no matter what. So they bought as many Amiga 3000UX machines as they could get their hands on for spare parts and such. He said they scrounged Usenet for machines for years. What really helped them was that the Amiga 3000 was the same machine (more or less) so they could buy either UX or 3000s for parts. The mouse and the especially the 2024 card was tough to get.
-He could understand why SUN was so interested in buying Amiga 3000UX machines and making them low-cost SUN workstations. They were incredibly fast, very well built, and cheaper than the competition. He said Apple's AUX machines were double the price or more for features standard to the UX machines.
Good memories.
I just thought you might find that of interest.
:-)
-P