As I've always said I like native systems, AxRuntime is like a native system.
It's not. It's still a host system which is capable of executing AROS executables.
It's something more like WINE.
I don't like host systems, if I have to use an application through a host system, I might as well use an application directly with the host system, you do it faster and you do it better.
I agree, but here it's different. Normally we're missing the ability to run AROS applications, but AxRuntime allows it in a relatively transparent way.
I'm still not sure what the capabilities or use cases are for AxRuntime. What can it do that an x86 or x86-64 system can't ?
I've read the documentation but some type of demo or explanation would be helpful.
See above. Plus AxRuntime, having Linux as base the kernel, avoids all the burden about hardware compatibility.
Plus, each AROS process is completely independent, so it cannot crash the system neither other applications. It's sort of "safe" SMP/AMP for AROS applications.
Until recently I have been using AROS Hosted or Native inside VM's like VirtualBox or VMWare. But I must say it's more satisfying using real software on real hardware. AROS One x86 Native is installed on my Morex 557 mini PC. It's great.
Native experience is awesome, but if the Linux kernel used by AxRuntime could be reduced to the minimum then it could give a good experience to AROS users (once a good Workbench replacement is available, of course).