For all sorts of reasons, including but not limited to:
1) My desktop computer is dead, for the moment. Dead C drive. Trying to decide whether to buy a new one, or to replace the drive and reinstall the OS. (I do not have a disc, but would have to buy it. They included a copy in a partition on the drive. I do not like that method, but everyone seems to do it. Ugh.) Leaning toward buying a new one. Assuming it isn't still under warranty which we're investigating now. And I really don't want Vista. But I really didn't want XP back when, and I got used to it and had good luck with it, so if I end up with Vista, hopefully the same experience will occur. *dubious*
2) The filling I got put in my front tooth Monday came out today. At least this time I probably shouldn't have to pay for it but this won't be fun. (They're not open tomorrow, and I noticed late tonight, so I'll sort this out Monday.)
1) My desktop computer is dead, for the moment. Dead C drive. Trying to decide whether to buy a new one, or to replace the drive and reinstall the OS. (I do not have a disc, but would have to buy it. They included a copy in a partition on the drive. I do not like that method, but everyone seems to do it. Ugh.) Leaning toward buying a new one. Assuming it isn't still under warranty which we're investigating now. And I really don't want Vista. But I really didn't want XP back when, and I got used to it and had good luck with it, so if I end up with Vista, hopefully the same experience will occur. *dubious*
2) The filling I got put in my front tooth Monday came out today. At least this time I probably shouldn't have to pay for it but this won't be fun. (They're not open tomorrow, and I noticed late tonight, so I'll sort this out Monday.)
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no subject
Linux has improved markedly over the last couple of years; Ubuntu, in particular, has been concentrating on the desktop and "ordinary" users.
Games are the big problem with Linux, of course. It works for me because I was never much of a Mac or Windows user; just copied my Unix config files -- a dozen years ago -- and kept going.
no subject
Linux developers' (and to some degree users') ideas of what desktop and "ordinary" users who are accustomed to Windows might need seem to have been quite wrong in the past. Given my general dislike of spending money OR time for things to go wrong, it just doesn't make sense to try that again without substantial need.
My Dad would have agreed with you, btw; he loved Linux. But he was also an old-school geek, a physics major who ended up working as a software engineer, and a tinkerer in all ways. And he didn't recommend Linux, even as recently as a few years ago, to users who weren't heavily technical / "geeks". Of course, those were older Linux versions, obviously.
no subject
Dual-boot is always an option if there are Windows programs you need.
*sigh* My Dad was an OS2 user; never did persuade him to try Linux. He's the one who got me interested in folk music, science fiction, and computers back in the 1950's. Chemist turned hacker, in his case. He died in 1999.
(added: um... I see you're in Oregon. I'll be in Portland for OSCon July 22-5.)