<< its not very good as a well personal OS relative to xp. if you wanna do what most average people do , i.e. word process, net surf, chat etc, xp is still better, because its easier to install stuff, more intiutive gui, and they are for the most part just as stable as each other. >>
Installation of application (in Debian): apt-get install name-of-the-app
Done
Installation in most other distros: rpm -i name-of-the-app
Done
as for the GUI... Have you actually used Gnome or KDE? I run KDE 2.2.2 right now and it's just so much better than Windows (W2K in my case) is. In fact, it's so good, that Microsoft copied some of the things in KDE in to XP 😉. Like application-grouping (if you have several IE's running, you could show it as just one app in the taskbar).
as for the drive-letters... the Linux/UNIX-way is so much better. Everything is under the root-directory. No C: or D: Where is your CD-ROM? In my case it's in /cdrom. Floppy is /floppy. My CD-RW is /cdrecorder. If I had another HD, it could be /usr. I could have my home-directory in a server, and mount in in to /home. If I wanted to moutn some other directories in a server, I could (for example) mount them to /network. Linux doesn't care one bit where those partitions physically reside, since you can mount them in to your root-tree 100% transparently. They user doesn't need to know (and in many cases doesn't know) wheter some directory is in his own HD, or in a server.
Once you get used to not having drive-letters, you will appreciate the flexibility and the elegance of it.