rdsrds2120 wrote:
Windows can provide you with all of the services you need, and Linux is just a different flavor of OS. Some may like another flavor, and that's ok. There's also no reason to turn up your nose at Windows simply because it's Windows. Windows 8, for example, is cheap and super easy to install. The average person doesn't know how to partition a drive and isn't familiar with installing Operating Systems. To fully understand what's best for the average consumer, you have to shift your perspective away from what you know as a technically inclined individual to someone who is not.
BMO
Yes, to be honest one can get used to Windows. In the same way some wives get used to battering husbands, and even look forward for the next punch.
BTW. You don't need to pre-partition if you are going to install only linux. When installing, there's a wizard where you can setup if you want different partitions but it also shows you whats the recommended settings for swap and home. And even if you want a dual-boot, windows and linux, the only thing you have to take care of is installing windows first, then the linux setup cd does all the job of making the partitions and installing grub and all.
But also, you do not know how stable Linux can be. Thing is, one gets used to the way one adapts to WIndows. You think it's normal to have to have an antivirus eating up your resources, you think it's normal to regularly check for malware, you think it's normal to defrag and fix the registry and all that. After 3-4 hours of work I would be able to make XP fairly stable, but eventually I had to perform clean ups and little by little, day by day, it would get slower. This doesn't happen in Linux.
But you have a point, one can live happily ever after with Windows, it provides you with all you need. It's like saying people weren't happy in the past because there were no computers or something related. But the moment you get used to Linux, you simply don't go back, you've seen the difference.