>this pop up requires NO PASSWORD to be entered!!!
only if you are an administrator. you gotta use vista before you start ripping on it. i've been running vista on a laptop and have had no problems what so ever. and mac os x has the same security feature, if you do something that requires administrative priviliges it'll ask you for the password, same with linux, when installing something or changing a setting it'll prompt you for a password.
> Anyways, you do not think
linux will get 50/50 from Microsoft any time soon?
software compatability. people want to run their programs with out any problems, and without having to confiure settings, wine is not the solution, as there are many problems with programs and it would be to hard for a regular user to do. linux is not ready for the world of every day users, they want something that they can use for every day things, music, movies, email, web, and yes linux has these capabilities, but they want itunes, quicktime, outlook, divx, windows media player, internet explorer. the only way i see linux having market share 50/50 is if ms goes bankrupt, which i don't see happening any where in the near future; or if ms is beat by another company like apple, which could happen, but not every one is ready to cough up $1200 for a computer when they can pay $600-800 for a decent hp or dell.
i don't see why people would hate bill gates other than jelocy over his money. his done great things, he's made foundations to benefit africans, he's giving away his money to charity.
>That is besides my point... point is Ubuntu is taking the best of all the Distros and making a Distro to enter the Desktop. We already know Linux has the
SERVER.
and it should stay that way. imagine if linux owned the desktop and the server market. how many viruses for linux would there be? 400,000? if that was the case, there would be windows enthusiast out there, wanting other to use windows.
i love linux, but there are just problems with it being mainstream.
in my opinion this would be a perfect world
servers --> linux, unix
home users --> mac os x
business, school --> windows