I have used Linux exclusively as my computer operating system for about five years. I used it previously alongside Windows XP for a few years.I am very happy with it. I can do anything in Linux that I can in Windows. I am more productive and save lots of $$$.Any other Linux users?Ramblings for the uninitiated....My computer came with Windows XP MCE and I can still boot into it if I choose, but it is more of a pain than anything. It takes me about 10 minutes before I can do anything. Windows does all kinds of checking for updates, then wants to re-boot, sometimes more than once. If I say no, it nags me every ten minutes or so, until I give in and re-boot. By then I have usually forgotten what I wanted to do any way.Linux boots faster. It never asks to re-boot. I am never nagged, even if it did want to re-boot (only for kernel updates does it even suggest that you re-boot). I don't use an anti-virus checker. I do not have to worry about malware, trojans or worms. I never need to defragment my hard drive.My OS plus all of the software cost me nothing. As in free! Unlike Windows which has an update every five years or so, my Linux is updated twice a year with a new version. I know exactly when the new one is to be released and I can do update via the internet.Linux is great for old computers. It has a very tiny footprint. You can run any version of Linux from a DVD or CD and some will run with a full graphical interface in as little as 50 MB. I can run it from a USB key and not even have a hard drive.Linux can install from inside Windows, from a CD, DVD or a network card. It is dead simple to install. You get a full graphical interface with a choice of desktops. It can look like a MAC or like Windows. I have a 3D card, so I get a full 3D desktop that makes Vista look like child's play. Unlike Vista it is fast. Crashes in Linux are almost unheard of. When it does crash it is usually just a graphics problem that requires to restart your graphical user interface.For people who have pirated software on their system, Linux lets you break that bad habit. There are free open source programs for almost anything.The one exception is games. There is no reason why Linux cannot do games. In fact some games such as Doom got there start there. It runs some Windows games and programs with a Windows emulator called Wine. I have this installed and can run my favorite Windows software. I can't think of one, because I use the open source ones. It will run MSOffice, Corel WordPerfect, Photoshop, iTunes, Paintshop Pro and Internet Explorer if you feels partial to these programs.I can also run a full version of Window XP at near native speed using VMWare if I wanted. This gives me access to any Windows program. But you need a valid Windows license to do this.I have two drives with a total of 11 partitions among them. In this space I run Windows XP and four different kinds of Linux. I actually only use one, but keep the others around for fun. Linux comes in different forms called distributions (distros for short) and they loosely fall into categories based on their history and package management (how they install programs).I have tried dozens of different distributions over the years before settling on one. I use Ubuntu 7.10 right now. I am currently running Simply MEPIS 7.0, SUSE 10.3 and PCLinuxOS on other partitions, but they change as I experiment.I have got into lots of problems with corrupted registries or boot sector errors in Windows, but never had problems like that with Linux. I keep my data on a separate partition so I have not lost any data as a result of all of the installing and de-installing.Linux is based on Unix which is what MAC OS/X is based on (actually FreeBSD). The file structure is different from Windows, but some kinds of Linux try to look like Windows by giving you a dummy c: drive which is really just a folder hidden in the root directory. However, it reads and writes to Windows drives formatted either as FAT32 or NTFS formats.Drivers used to be a problem with Linux, but it is better than Vista for the most part in detecting hardware and installing device drivers. There are a few devices that continue to be problematic. Usually they are from obscure manufacturers or are Windows specific.If you want to try Linux you can do it without installing it on your computer. To do this you download an .iso file from the internet (distrowatch.org is a good starting place) and burn it to CD. You have to choose a distribution with a Live CD. This means that it is a fully functioning OS that runs from the CD. When you burn the CD you must open the iso file up in your burning program (Nero or similar). The iso is a compressed file format and it creates a bootable CD. Burning it as a data file is worthless. Then you put the burned CD in the drive and re-boot. It will take you into the world of Linux!Good distros to try are:Ubuntu which has a desktop manager called Gnome which is simpler, but more like a MAC PCLinuxOs which uses KDE as its desktop manager and it looks more like Windows XPSimplyMEPIS which also uses KDE. If you have an old clunker that you want to try Linux on you can use other desktops which use less memory such as Fluxbox of XFCE. Ubuntu has different versions Kubuntu uses KDE and Xbuntu uses XFCE. There are even two Christian versions of Ubuntu called Ichthux and Ubuntu CE (Christian Edition). It also has a Muslim edition. In the Christian edition you get Bible software and Christian wallpaper, etc.Ubuntu is an African word, which has been described as "too beautiful to translate into English". The essence of Ubuntu is that "a person is a person through other people". It describes humanity as "being-with-others". It is about community which is what Linux and open source is all about. It is user driven, instead of market driven. It is participatory, instead of directed from the top down. Blessings,Dunamite