This is where you do not get it. People like to have Amiga like OS. Haiku or whatever is almost like recommending Windows.
As I'm typing this on my MorphOS PPC Mac Mini, you don't have to tell me about Amiga-like OS's. I've got all of them. They are all a disappointment despite the good start they were off to in the mid-90s and onward.
Arix is a hybrid between Linux and Aros. It leans a little heavier on the Linux side so that it doesn't need new drivers. I have a lot higher hope for Arix than I ever did for any other Amiga-derived system. I suspect that the Aros Zune GUI will be lighter-weight than the LXDE desktop running on Peppermint Linux and, best of all, it's memory protected, SMP enabled and Linux compatible to the point that it will probably be good at running software in WebAssembly. I hope that Arix squashes Ubuntu desktop because the last time I tried installing Ubuntu 20,04.1 it was so heavy that it was no better than Windows anyway.
Anyway, this talk about Linux and Arix is a bit off-topic and ultimately, Aros is dying except for Aros 68k.
What is the point Samurai_Crow?
Even on 1 core AROS have the potentional to be many times faster than your PPC mac mini.
That said MorphOS is for sure the best NG Amiga like system right now. Most stable OS, best supported software etc.
Fast CPU is does neither make a great OS. Some software will run faster, some will not. It is all a about requirements.
People make great games running on classic hardware with 7MHz CPU or C64 with 64k RAM.
It is obvious that you enjoy using Amiga like OS since you type from it right now, still you come here and complain about AROS or Amiga like operative systems. You know everything about them, that is great, most of us do. We know the limitations etc. We still love it and have fun with it. It is a hobby.
I agree with you its been a disappointment that Amiga went bankrupt and alternatives been bypassed by far by other Operative System. I'm over that long time ago, just accept it. It is still a lot of fun and good software to play with.
What AROS need is a steady user base that like to see things happen.
That will make developers want to support it. I think if we push the right buttons that could easy happen. We must show that we are alive and that we have some great software. After ABI v.0 stalled we lost a lot of interest. We need to bring that back! At least I will try to help with that. If it does not happen and die that is sad. Its been almost dead for years now. I agree about that.