Wow, I read Amy's post back almost one year ago, and I also read some of your posts Robin here, but I never thought you two knew each other

I can only second the opinion you quoted here: it was about the same for me. I used to use Vista and was perfectly satisfied with it even if that seems strange to most people

My ex-boyfriend used Linux and told me mostly good things about it and sometimes suggested for me to setup a dual boot, but I was not really interested. It may be good but hey, I already have
everything I need, why would I bother to change?
It took some months later a mistake (forgetting to run the crack

) for me to NEED to use a LiveCD to save data before I re-installed Vista. Then I found I could do without it for 1 or 2 weeks (it was the middle of the exam-period so I could really not afford to do all the re-installing and configuration unless absolutely necessary). After 2 weeks I was quite unwilling to install Vista again as I did not want to re-install every 4 months like I used to do (due to activation reasons...) so I just sticked with Linux. I got interested and spent quite a lot of time since then learning about it, which definitely was not my original intention. It would have actually frightened me if I knew this in advance

Now I see that I did not have
everything I needed and probably I do not have everything even now, but I enjoy using the computer a lot more.
It's a fact but I think a very sad one that some people who are not inherently enthusiastic about experimenting with computers will never feel the NEED to even try Linux and lot of them may miss an experience that would change their attitude. Teaching Linux at schools or more advertising would probably change this but we all know the limitations.
Just to say also something ontopic

, I think less choice would concentrate the info people get about Linux (not that someone talks about Ubuntu others about some other distro or Linux in general, they show you Gnome or KDE or something else and then you have no idea at all what this thing actually is. If you do not really know what to expect, the chance to get interested and take the time to research is little). It would also concentrate developers' focus and maybe would result in better quality and less bugs. But it's impossible to limit choices or get people agree on what to promote anyway and maybe it wasn't desirable either, for a lot of other reasons.
And even if we could, most people still would not feel the NEED to switch, they're happy they learned how to use Windows, they can do what they want on it and most people are also short on time...
PS. Sorry if I made some grammatical mistakes (not my mother tongue).