I think we are waaaaay overcomplicating the issue here.
Q1, why are we on amiga.org?
A1, cos we know more than the average guy in the street about computers nomatter wat our OS preference.
Q2, who buys the majority of computers?
A2, businesses putting PC's on USERS desktops
Q3, what do users want?
A3, point and click ease of use.
Q4, why to the general public buy PC's?
A4a, cos its what they have at work.
A4b, cos there is a shed load of software for them.
i mean, for example. look at WinXP. everything has been tailored so that the user doesn't have to think for themselves, just point and click, burn a CD, point and click, download some music, point and click... etc. etc.
thats why win(whatever) is so big. so it can provide all the services to a user no matter what they want to do, or what hardware is installed.
if OS4 can do that, integrated office tools (with microshaft compatability - Sun Star office anyone?), internet browser, e-mail, networking facilities, media player/encoder, cd burning software all tied INTO the OS. then it might start to get beyond the 10Mb or so here or there that we are used to.
i'm not sticking up for windows. but the win2k/xp platform has to be one of the most stable and robust desktop OS's out there.
sure sure Linux this and MacOS that. but you are relying on people actually being interested in the computers more than what they can do with them as they currently stand.
that and microsoft's licensing saying that every new PC must be supplied with a copy (installed?) of their operating system. kinda has the vendors in a strangle hold unless they are big enuff to write in their own bit of the contract.
the only way to breaking into the mainstream is either big budget advertising with machines on display in places like PCworld or Circuit City, and shop staff that are actually enthusiastic and trained on what these machines are. instead of "yeah the amiga's great for this and that, but you really want a PC"
or
finding a niche market like the Mac
just my 2pence/cents