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Linux, on the other hand, allows you to legally install it on every computer you own. So putting Linux on ten or more PCs is not only legal but desirable as a form of advertising for the operating system. But Windows users have been doing the same thing all these years. They've been advertising Windows by passing it around. It wasn't legal, nor condoned by Microsoft, but Windows piracy was a form of advertising that actually helped promote Windows and insure its growth. As you can see, all this rampant piracy didn't prevent Microsoft's Chairman Bill Gates from becoming one of the richest men in the world.

There's another thing to consider, when you think of operating system piracy. If you're a corporation with thousands of computers, you get a special deal on Windows licensing. If you're a big PC maker like Hewlett-Packard, you get a discount on OEM versions of Windows. But if you're a small computer store and you build five clone PCs per month, you'd have to pay the typical single user price for genuine Windows. (For XP that's about one hundred dollars for the Home Edition and one hundred fifty dollars for the Professional Edition.) It's hard for a small individual to get started and compete with the big boys, and pirating the operating system can be a means of leveling the playing field. Such piracy can be considered as really being a "discount for the Working Class."

There are several Linux distributions that are just as good or even better than anything Microsoft has to offer. But people will still cling to Windows because they don't really want to learn anything new and switching to Linux would require a small learning curve. Microsoft has probably already made deals with PC vendors to install its Vista on practically every major PC brand in the US as soon as it comes out. To be fair to everyone, all PC's should come without an operating system. When someone orders the PC they would order the operating system as well and the store would then install it. Imagine if people were given the choice: "Fedora Core 4 Linux: free" or "Windows Vista Professional: $200.00." I wonder if they would still choose Windows?

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