Soybomb: I would say that almost any one of the current Linux distros or the current FreeBSD whoops da sheet out of Win3.1 on the desktop (they whoop on on 9x for me, though 2000 I'll admit is a little better on the desktop for the average user). OS X != Linux/BSD though. It's got a BSD-like kernel underneath, but that kernel is not the whole of OS X. It's got a command line but Apple has made it so that you don't even need to touch it if you don't want to. And Apple didn't go with X11 (which I like X11, but some people have a problem w/ it), they wrote their own stuff. From your comments you make it sound like OS X is just a fancy Linux distro. It's not. Though it has a Unix kernel underneath it is built from the ground up to be a very usable and user friendly system which any newbie could be productive on right out of the box (and it looks pretty good doing it too). For the power users among us though, we could use the command line and have all the fun we want with gcc compilers and such. OS X for x86 would be anything but a flop. People know the Apple name and they assosiate it with being easy to use (as they do with Windows. The mere mention of Linux scares many and they don't even know what BSD is), and hence if it were release for the x86 platform and Apple could push one or two big OEM's (Dell and Gateway are what I'm thinking) to have it as just an option, then I think Apple could double or trible their market share as far as the # of machines running MacOS goes.