Ummm - what do you want to tell me with that? Do you want me also to move on?
Clearly you do whatever you want, I was just curious since your use for the Amiga seemed very application driven.
Here we seem to differ. For me it was an unexpensive tool and had to work the way I wanted. A stunning device back then (and in some aspects even today), but nevertheless just a tool. Nothing to found a "religion" on.
Yes, that's true. Back then you could get so much capability for your money with the Amiga. Not true anymore!
And despite that you nevertheless prefer the OCS over RTG? Seriously?
It's not that I preferred OCS over RTG, but I preferred the idea of Amiga-specific graphics/sound hardware, especially early on when it was so much more powerful than the competition. So I guess it was like a religion for me. Of course I wanted a nice, fast 256+ color workbench at a high resolution, but I wanted it done the "Amiga way" and not just by slapping in a PC graphics card.
As you "did not expand much" I guess you were happy with what these machines offered in their original state, namely their graphics?
I was to an extent, but always wanted more and hoped C= was working on new chips. Back then I only knew what was published in magazines, the internet was not what it is today, and I had no insider information - just lots of rumors. It's hard to say for sure, but I believe I left the Amiga scene before RTG became popular. I don't recall many or any RTG cards being available that made me want to purchase. I think maybe the OpalVision was announced and seemed interesting but too limited (not really RTG).
What do you mean with "custom"?
I mean the Amiga chipset, graphics & sound, things that were only found in the Amiga and made it stand out from the competition. "Amiga custom chips".
http://www.bigbookofamigahardware.com/bboah/CategoryList.aspx?mid=377 And - did they do so?
No.
Instead they preferred to go belly up by pumping all their money into their overpriced and underpowered x86 line of computers instead of improving the Amiga properly.
Did they really spend a lot of money on their x86 hardware? Here in the US it seemed like a very minor part of their business. I do not see that as a major reason for the fall of C=.
B.T.W. - what did you use to "shove it in the faces of your PC-loving friends", once you realised C= didn't develop the things you wanted, but went bust instead?
Hah! Nothing unfortunately.

I exited the Amiga scene before C= went out of business because I needed a PC for school and work and could not afford both. I still remember selling my Amiga 4000 and purchasing a 486DX2/66 with Orchid Fahrenheit 1280 video card. It was a sad day!
However, a few years prior I got great pleasure showing my PC friends and work buddies the Walker Demo on the Amiga. It was so amazing at the time!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IyMpU0nMuZo Hardware does not have to have an heart, it just has to do for me what I want and how I want it. No heart required so far...
That's the religion part of things. Do cars need heart? If not, tell that to all the Mazda RX-7 fanatics out there who love their Wankel Rotary Engines.

I mean - the decision for PPC has been made long ago and neither you, nort me, will ever change that. We should be lucky that Trevor invested money in new Amiga capable hardware and tries his best also to support software development!
Agreed. I am not lucky, because I really have no interest in NG, but for users that do have interest I think it is amazing that development at this level is still occurring.