Employers are used to using windows, and the employees are, too. Who the fuck would want to decrease (even temporarily) the productivity of their company to switch to Linux, where they will spend glorious amounts of time hunting perfect alternatives (which may or may not exist) to the PERFECT business applications that they already use, when the change isn't even going to be an improvement (in fact, you're going to have the tech-illiterates wondering around not knowing where the hell this or this is in Linux)? No one. Linux is a very inconvenient workspace format.
You talk about "alternative this" or "alternative that". Where are they, what are they, and where is your concrete proof about them being as good?
I merely gave examples of how DRM is bad, which is related to Vista/Win7 (What *could* happen to them).
The freedom I speak of is the ability to do what ever I want with my OS, which I think is necessary especially at an OS level over application level. Because bugs would be *much* easier to fix, security would be better (lots of people think that hiding code is security, but thats simply not true), and user flexability would be greater because so many more people/companies could easily contribute.
[snip]
You were being ridiculously vague about the DRM issue. I fail to see how the hell it has anything much to do with the actual OS itself. I have not run into ANY issues involving DRM on my Vista system and it has stayed that way. The only time it's popped up is when I was playing a song that I downloaded, and it was right to; that song was protected media. The damn thing doesn't touch anything other than that.
As a user of a Vista system, I will say that you are WAY fucking overreacting about the DRM. It's not even noticeable, and it doesn't do shit.
I will admit Vista is a bit overbloated, and sometimes a little annoying, but even IT isn't as bad as people make it out to be, and the Aero skin looks quite fantastic. Honestly, it just seems you're pulling stuff out of your ass, concerning how much you're a fanboy of Linux, not about how Linux is actually in any way better. The only valid point you've really given is that you can customize it. Yippee, now I can dig around with piles of code and whatnot, to achieve some effect that was entirely unnecessary, and doesn't make up for shit.
If Linux is gonna even start competing with windows, they have to set their focus to one distro, and start developing to it. That isn't to say other people shouldn't be able to tweak it (have fun fucking around with 50 fucking megs of code, or something), but just the fact that they don't have shit in the unity department is part of the reason that Linux doesn't have very good support. The damn thing needs to get its act together. Literally. If it was as easy to use as Windows, and it had all of the support of Windows, I would use it. It doesn't. I don't want to be a handicapped man in a wheelchair that goes slightly faster than walking speed. I'd rather be a man that has working legs and can walk, albeit a bit slower. Crappy analogy, but I'm tired.
With that argument aside, I'm not gonna say that Vista is better than XP. It really isn't (but you knew that). Nevertheless, I haven't had any urges to change it lately, nor have I gotten horribly annoyed with it, and I even find it downright convenient, at times. If that ain't saying something, I don't know what is.
So okay, Linux can keep all of its wonderful advanced features, while I stay with the applications that count (that is, any application ever released; compare that to your library. >_>).