In your opinion which is the better OS? Does Windows provide all the functionality needed to perform well at all times in all areas?
Let me tell you my nightmare experience with Windows.
About 6 months after I acquired my first computer with Windows (I had used one at work, so I was familiar with it), which had Windows ME, I started having problems with my HP DeskJet printer. Print jobs would get interrupted with the error message "error communicating to
printername" or "cannot communicate with
printername" (I don't remember the exact wording now).
Sometimes this could be solved by turning the printer power off, purging the print spool, turning the printer power back on and sending the print job again. But it got worse and more frequent, sometimes requiring I turn the printer off and on 20 or more times.
Of course, anyone I contacted for help (HP - manufacturer of the printer and the computer, Microsoft) could only go through the basic "computers for dummies" troubleshooting steps (seeing if you've got a paper jam, seeing if the printer shows up in your devices, etc.), and then all would claim the problem was not with their device/OS. No one would take responsibility. I am not computer-illiterate and had been reading "SmartComputing Magazine" almost from the beginning, which can include some really good trouble-shooting, security, system administration and other advice while being understandable even by a newbie. I flipped through all my magazines and tried everything to find the cause of the problem, to no avail.
Finally the printer wouldn't work at all (and this after I upgraded to XP). I brought the printer to a computer repair shop, and it worked fine on
their computer. I bought a new Lexmak Z45 printer. It was okay for a while, then the same nightmare started all over. Eventually I just couldn't communicate with the printer at all, ever.
Finally, one day (about 1.5 years after the problem surfaced), I got a new error message...telling me that my USB port was corrupted. I switched my hardware around, and it would give me that message on any port the printer was attached to, but not any others, so I know my USB port wasn't really corrupted. Apparently, nobody at Microsoft was willing to take responsibility that its OS had a glitch somewhere, or pass the problem out of the hands of basic help-desk operators to a programmer who could find the problem (I gladly would have emailed them a copy of any system files if the needed to compare them to the originals), or any other person who could figure it out. They wouldn't admit it was an OS problem and said I needed to contact the printer manufacturer, of course the printer manufacturer wouldn't take back the printer and insisted there was nothing wrong with their printer, which there so obviously wasn't.
It was so obvious Windows had corrupted my printer. It didn't do anything to the USB port, though that's the error it was giving me.
By this time I had gotten a 2nd computer. I got Windows XP with that and wiped out Windows on the first computer and replaced it with Mandrake Linux. I was a total Linux newbie. I got kind of frustrated with it and didn't have time to deal with it, plus I was involved in other stuff. But Mandrake had no problem with my USB ports. I since paid for and installed Xandros OS (about half the price of Windows XP), but I don't really like it because it's own package-management system stinks, and I got very sick and wasn't on it for a long time, 'till after my support ran out. It also has some very strange shells and the bash shell is missing man pages on a lot of commands. For some reason the executable installation program for Linux for the Firefox browser and Thunderbird email won't install on Xandros. I tried another browser, too.
Also, the printers most commonly sold with cheap Windows systems (HP and Lexmark) are really not supported with CUPS ("common Unix printing system") and there are no Linux drivers for my models. So I need to get a better printer, like a Brother or an Epson, which don't make tons of cheap printers that they won't support with drivers 6 months down the road, like the models you get included with deals from Wal-Mart and Best Buy.
If you pay for an operating system, you should get proper support, whether you're a home user or a corporation. Also, Microsoft's email support system did not work for
many months! (It would not allow me to enter all the digits of my liscence key on the website, so I couldn't send an email support request, even while email support was free). That is absolutely horrifying!
Besides, Internet Explorer is a huge security hole whether you actually use it or not, and after settling the anti-trust in the U.S., Microsoft went ahead and did more once the suit was over...they made it so you can't even use the update site to check patches your Windows needs without using IE. You cannot use another browser to check for updates!!! (They even explicitly say so on their site, and I tried with 4 browsers, just in case.) That is definitely an anti-trust violation, how convienient of them to do this after they settled the lawsuit...the terms of which required Windows to allow users to uninstall IE!
And besides the unable-to-check-for-updates issue, it is possible to actually harm or break some functionality of Windows by uninstalling IE. In the anti-trust case, Microsoft claimed that they weren't in violation of anti-trust laws, in part, because users could uninstall IE.
I have had other problems with Windows too numerous to mention, though not crashing because this was a
big improvement over ME by XP. I only held onto it so long because HomeSite, the only text-editor for HTML I have ever liked (it's awesome), is not made for Linux. But I've found a few with most of its features for Linux, so I have no reason to keep Windows, except I need to migrate emails, contacts, files, pictures, webpages, text files and bookmarks before I completely wipe it out.
BTW, I'm going to wipe out Xandros and overwrite with Knoppix or Gentoo Linux, or use Knoppix to install Gentoo Linux. I'll get pretty much any printer except HP or Lexmark and I'll be good to go. Brother is the best cross-platform brand, and I have a Brother multifunction center attached to my Windows machine, I just don't know if I'll be able to use all the features on the software they include with this model (the software is made for Windows and Mac)...but as it is, I don't have a fax # anyway. I'll get a new printer if I have to,
never to use Windows again!
I've never had Linux crash or do an unexpected shutdown...
ever! (Technically, Windows XP doesn't crash either, it shuts down safely to prevent a crash, but that's just as annoying).
After an introductory Linux class where I learned about Knoppix and Gentoo, I've decided on Gentoo, at least for this computer (my Windows box is in for repairs and I have all my files, etc., backed up by the store where I bought it). Once everything's migrated, I'll work on the Windows box, whether Gentoo or Knoppix or something else. I may even do a dual-boot system with Windows in case I need it for future college homework for IT classes, but not actually boot to Windows anytime soon.
Did you know that the original UNIX team was responsible for developing the TCP/IP standards that make the World-Wide Web possible over the Internet? They believed in a system where anyone, anywhere in the world with any computer could communicate with anyone else, and they work toward that end. Microsoft, after resisting TCP/IP, would love to hog the World-Wide Web all to themselves if they could! So they work toward that end. They propose using technology to inhibit illegal CD resales, and design it so such CDs can only be copied onto computers with Windows. (This is why I no longer buy any music albums. If I can't copy them to
the system I want to play them from, which I have a legal right to do, I won't buy them at all. If I'm not sure a CD uses the new technology, and I buy it and I can't copy the tracks, I just return it to the store for a refund, saying it's defective, and never buy anything from that artist again.)
Maybe I got into a little too much detail here, but my point is:
I ... HATE ... WINDOWS! Windows is a menace to free communication (and sometimes your hardware)!