1. Tried Ubuntu or other user friendly distro? I can tell you haven't.
2. Driver support is there, where the hardware vendors have either provided drivers, or have provided tech specs for others to make the drivers.
3. MS have not released details of their doc/excel/access encryption, ergo it's a bit difficult for anyone but MS to release software that is fully compatible with MS Office.
4. You do realise that drivers compile when you install them with windows?
5. So you never need to reboot your windows box when updating GFX drivers? Yeah right.
6. HP already provide Linux as their first choice for their outsourcing. IBM also provide it as an option, but the whole corporate vs domestic has little to do with this subject. If one does it, the other will too. In either order.
1. Ubunutu Install didn't even complete on my box that had a working CentOS running on it prior to the install.
2. My High Point RAID5 required me to manually compile the driver for the kernel. If I update the Kernel then needed to redo the driver as no longer read my Highpoint RAID5 array. 4. When my driver compile in Windows, I go next, next, next click to restart etc, not find out kernel version, install kernel-devel for that version, tell to build the driver then install the driver. It does it in the background where I don't care how it does it as long as it does it.
3. This is my point. There is a lot of MS Office format out there, right or wrong it needs to be accessible, if MS doesn't let people have the format spec then you are going to have to convert the files over.
5. I have to reboot when I upgrade drivers, I have no problem with that, I just expect to be able to go next, next, next reboot, it is all mouse clicks and real easy. I don't have to expect to drop into a different mode to do this. There are 3rd party repositories for CentOS that will do this for you but you have to go into config files, tell yum about the repository etc
6. Average Joe Public will use at home what they use at work as is what they are familar with. With the otherway round I know a linux person who wanted to use Linux at work as familar with and told to stop wasting there time, as they weren't going to test the systems with anything other then the corporate standard. He couldn't access the Word or Excel files, or Visio, the Exchange Server didn't have IMAP enabled so no mail other then via OWA
Linux definitely has a place in computing and it is brilliant work that the people who develop linux do. I use Linux myself in the form of CentOS as a base OS for VMWare Servers.
I also use Linux in the form of Check Point SPLAT daily and have used this to convert many people away from running Windows OS as the platform for there Check Point firewall. I could do this because the Linux is hidden from you.
Install CD into drive and reboot
Say yes to install
Select Network Interface
Set IP address, subnet mask and gateway
Select to enable HTTPS web front end or not
Wait for install to complete
Need to upgrade the version
Install CD
On Keyboard login
type
patch add cd
answer simple questions job done
You forget that it is linux you are using
Get Desktop Linux to be that easy and it stands a chance!