@Plaz
We don`t know was it a single paid contract (probably used to refund the Amiga Inc losses) or is it based on sales (per computer) where Amiga Inc fate is tied to CBM USA.
What I dislike in Amiga.org case is that CBM USA started to behave like they own the old CBM Amiga logo universally not only for a computer.
Also, it seems for AmigaInc licencing the name (existed long time on web site) was matter of money, not issuing to as many clients as possible, as I understand Acube tried it and failed. So my guess is not too many "victims" they will find, and as with X1000, we can use AmigaOne name for our hardware.
Having both Commodore and Amiga name gives them a great adventage, but will see how they will do and what price they will set.
Only gain real Amiga community can have is from those dissapointed users or users willing to search for real AmigaOS developments.
Dropping AROS (even all their announcements count on it) is also a strange thing, but best to my knowledge they compete with AresOne which has a very nice software setup and is able to better emulate Amiga Classic out of box.
http://www.vesalia.de/?lng=eIf they reach higher price then similarly built AresOne (while underpowered since they use Atom and integrated gfx) then it`s our duty to promote AresOne against it, since it benefits AROS and they are not about to . I doubt they will create better software bundle.
They may also "come out of closet" in November, together with EP460 so it will be interesting - we`ll be speaking of our new toy, and imagine their campaign will be even more agresive.
I believe X1000 will wait next year, but A-EON were supposed to get this kind of "new Amiga" attention,
so they basically "stole the momentum".
It seems they want all the customers they can get, so they don`t have troubles in having couple of x86 trolls
In pointing out the problems they had with Commodore name and moment of purchase of Amiga Inc, I believe they have sorted it out by now before launch, but I wanted to point out that they have not contacted anyone dealing with similar products or using similar names, so it was a real "hidden strike" for everyone.
My best bet is as they call as small retro nostalgia community they will soon discover PC users out there will not buy their computers just for nostalgia name, once discovering that is what they already have.