OK john, just a few points I'd like to make in order to put the rest of the nails in the ME coffin.
1) Dell, Compaq and Gateway all three demanded, and recieved, permission from MS to package 98se with their new systems about 6 months before XP came out due to the sheer volume of calls that they were recieving about problems with Windows ME. I'm not going to spend the time finding some proof on the internet right now, I will only say that when I heard about this I checked and, sure enough, all three of them were shipping their top-of-the-line systems with Win98se. Hmmm, seems like there WAS some type of problem.
2) I had a personal experience with ME. My parents bought a new P4 1.4 almost 2 years ago (right around christmas time) from Dell that (at the time) came with ME. In three days, the system crashed. I hadn't installed anything on the system yet, not even upgrades. All I was doing was surfing the internet and relishing in the speed with which it loaded (it did have one benefit). After forcing Dell to send me Win98se, set out to find out what was wrong before the software got there. The problem was, I couldn't even RUN scandisk. But, after burning the midnight oil (along with the 1a.m. oil, the 2a.m. oil, etc.), I did manage to get back into ME. If you know anything about troubleshooting a computer, you know that scandisk makes all the fragments it finds into files on the system drive called filexxx.chk. I had almost 800 of them. But that's not surprising since I found the root of the problem, ME had placed two FATs (file allocation tables) on the hard drive. Hell, even Win2k wouldn't know what to do with that.
3) There are things that make a 2k/XP comparison simply ridiculous, such as: NTFS, improved security, the ability to run longer without a restart (even MS wouldn't tell you otherwise), the feature mentioned above that now works around BSODs, and, most importantly, Win ME, like 98 and 98se, has the ability to write to any part of a disk, while NT, 2k, and XP made the most important system areas off-limits. I suppose you're going to tell me now that writing to the system areas would be the program's fault and not the OS? Right, and it's the theif's fault that I left the back door unlocked.
4) Remember the point we're trying to make. It's not that it is absolutely impossible to install ME and have it run forever and never BSOD, just that it's more unlikely with ME than with any OS before it or after it (so far at least). Nobody's saying that you didn't get lucky, just that most people won't If you're denying that the experiences of all of the people in these forums is true then you're truely naive. The ENTIRE COMPUTING COMMUNITY - save one or two here and there that are like you - have closed the case on Win ME and deemed it a sub-par OS. It was rushed through production (which ANY techie at MS will confirm) and was the SOLE REASON that XP was looked over carefully before being released. Ultimately that was unneccessary as it was built on a fundamentally better backbone, but it WAS delayed (you'll have no problem finding proof as that was fairly big news at the time). Oh, but y'know, MS is only a company, you know better, right?
5) If you're telling us that we're incompetent, and yet think that you're the man, explain this: how is it that you can say that you're "making those systems run perfectly" when in reality you've said that you've never "made" anything. Your claim is that you've never had problems since first installing the OS. If that's true, then you should hope that your systems don't ever "mess up" as you haven't proven in any fashion that you have the slightest idea of how to fix them.
Case closed. Please don't further embarrass yourself by continuing this arguement. I'm a college debate national champion and I'd be happy to continue this discussion elsewhere. Leave these good people alone. You can find me on IRC with the same nick.
Sell crazy somewhere else; we're all stocked up here. - Jack Nicholson "As Good As It Gets"