Lynden
a "fish hater"
I just got into this sort of thing a little while ago and in my opinion 7 is probably the best OS available right now, if one overlooks it's "beta flaws". I would put it above Leopard by a small margin, which itself I would put above Vista by a small margin. I have used XP and Tiger as well as a few of the Linux OS's and never really liked them as much. Not to say that I disliked them.
Furthermore, I would disagree with the idea of Macs being a super-expensive tricycle. I plan to buy a MacBook Pro for university this fall and am doing so not for the OS but for the computer itself, including the durability, lightness, batterylife, performance etc. I have been shopping around for laptops lately and I can say that it is very difficult to find a laptop, similarly configured, that costs significantly less than the MacBook pro, and none with similar performance have batterylife even approaching that of the Mac (a claimed 8-hours for the new 17''). That sort of thing has undeniable usefullness in a university setting.
However I will probably be dual-booting OSX with Vista on that machine, because I do agree that it is a great OS, and that if one knows how to use Vista it rarely experiences problems. I did have a fairly significant problem on my laptop running Vista in which internet connectivity totally ceased, but a re-install fixed that.
OSX can actually be made to run on almost any modern computer, it by no means requires Mac hardware. There are many ways to do so, and it is very easy to do on a computer with an Intel CPU. It isn't exactly legal, being a violation of Apple's EULA, but these things happen...OSX has a great interface and is really well optimised it helps that to run OSX you need to have hardware it supports letting them write the software which is perfect for the hardware involved, windows needs to work for everyone and all hardware.
Furthermore, I would disagree with the idea of Macs being a super-expensive tricycle. I plan to buy a MacBook Pro for university this fall and am doing so not for the OS but for the computer itself, including the durability, lightness, batterylife, performance etc. I have been shopping around for laptops lately and I can say that it is very difficult to find a laptop, similarly configured, that costs significantly less than the MacBook pro, and none with similar performance have batterylife even approaching that of the Mac (a claimed 8-hours for the new 17''). That sort of thing has undeniable usefullness in a university setting.
However I will probably be dual-booting OSX with Vista on that machine, because I do agree that it is a great OS, and that if one knows how to use Vista it rarely experiences problems. I did have a fairly significant problem on my laptop running Vista in which internet connectivity totally ceased, but a re-install fixed that.