well since you guys have taken the discussion (argument) to the next level, i won't get involved in it, but i would like to respond to something mikhael said, i assume he was referring to my posts i made earlier:
Ease of use: I hate to break it to you, but Windows isn't easy to use. My mother--and most likely yours--couldn't install a program on her own if her life depended on it. Installing the OS? Give it up. These are not metrics for determining the transition. The real metric is how easy the PROGRAMS are to use.
But mikhael, honestly, you have to admit, that if you compare Windows, to, let's say, the uber-stable Linux, Windows
is easier to use. I never said it was easier to install, but for the average user (a person who
doesn't know how to program, who
doesn't need to know anything other than how to check his email, surf the net, and occasionally play a game of solitaire), Windows IS the dominant product, i'll even say it beats out Linux, because it does, it's an easy GUI where you point and click... I can't see grandma, and most of the kids in school typing in command line to open programs and stuff. Now sure you say "my mother -and most likely yours -- couldn't install a program on her own if her life depended on it"... that's true, but could she install a Linux module? most likely not. And someone mentioned security? Yeah sure XP (particularly) has many security flaws, but for the average user, who gives a damn. I'd take non-Windows operating systems myself, but i'll bet... i'll bet, that everyone so far that posted in this thread, posted from a machine that was running some version of Windows, myself included.
You really can't argue it. Windows is
the dominant operating system, simply because of its GUI appeal, ease of use, etc. For advanced users, such as Kazan, mikhael, myself, etc. who realize the flaws and limitations of using any form of Windows, we use other operating systems, some of which Kazan mentioned... and find ways of doing things (such as play Freespace?

) within it, even though it may not be as easy as popping a CD in the drive and double clicking an icon on the desktop... but unfortunately that's the way the computer-
illiterate world works... People don't care about security flaws or program limitations, they just want it to be simple, and easy, and
familiar, which is why Windows and Mac OS are so popular. i dunno, it's just my opinion. I really have no expectations of the whole world suddenly switching from Windows to Linux (regardless of how good that would be for so many reasons), because it's not going to happen.