Could have packaged up the Amiga chipset on an ISA card, an all-in-one video/audio/io gizmo. Sell that to 386 owners and give the OS away. Bonus points for a ROM socket to insta-boot AmigaOS with no disk.
By the time they would've decided to do this, the Amiga chipset was looking pretty dated. 386's with SuperVGA and SoundBlaster cards were becoming common place in the early 90's. Once the 486 came out (1989), the price of 386 hardware dropped fast. Commodore seemed more interested in going the other direction: putting an x86 (BridgeBoard) into an Amiga.
I was an Amiga fan from roughly 1988 through 1994, started with an A500, expanded it, then moved on to an A3000. The platform was incredible. I learned a ton from it and taught myself C on that system. But by 1994, I wanted a Linux system, so a 486 it was...
I was an Amiga fan from roughly 1988 through 1994, started with an A500, expanded it, then moved on to an A3000. The platform was incredible. I learned a ton from it and taught myself C on that system. But by 1994, I wanted a Linux system, so a 486 it was...