Undoubtedly there have been posts here decrying similar facts about the Amiga's significance in modern day computing and her fate. In case it hasn't sunk in yet and I can save a few souls from depressingly idling on cloud 9 with respect to the platform, I humbly submit:
1. The Amiga, once the watermark of multimedia and Commodore's last hope for a piece of the desktop, no longer has a seat in the consumer marketplace. The tinkerers have Linux, creative types MacOS X, and the suits Windows. Forget about the enterprise/server/embedded/game markets, too. AmigaOS will not bring with it distinguishing characteristics, features, or marketing muscle of any significance.
2. The current miniscule AmigaOS market demand is fueled by overzealous "old timers", nostalgic for a brand and the emotion it invoked in earlier years, college lads, and borderline infantile internationals who yearn for the revival of their gaming machine. I was once in camp #1, and I say this in humility. Look at yourself in the mirror; study the posts on Amiga BBS's. There's no demographic of value here; just relics and hacker brats.
3. Considering points 1 and 2, no large scale efforts backed with serious capital will be invested in this has-been operating system. The Amiga is on a reverse snowball to the days of the Homebrew Computer Club, where a tiny and dedicated band of hobbyists fueled a microeconomic market dynamic for a machine the "insiders" know is the best thing on the block -- now, if only the "outsiders" would catch on. The outsiders aren't paying attention and have no reason to. Amiga lost.
Use your machines until the IC's blow. Encase the carcass in a plastic display and walk high knowing you had a piece of computing history, one that helped define an industry although it was never in the cards for the platform to seize it.
I know you deny all of the above and it may hurt. Perhaps easiest would be not to admit defeat, but instead enjoy the rest of the ride together before the Amiga is finally allowed to rest in peace alongside her brothers and sisters.