Here's one from 6 months ago
https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en&fromgroups#!searchin/comp.os.linux.advocacy/Rex$20Ballard$20Linux$20Acer$20ASUS$20Casio/comp.os.linux.advocacy/St2C-0s0Ml4/D1tgZe0ZZqUJ
http://tinyurl.com/78jetrk
In the thread:
Hoooray!!!! Death to micoshaft!!
I wrote:
Microsoft has a big problem right now. Compaq was in bad shape when HP bought them, Gateway was on the verge of Bankruptcy when they were bought by Acer, and IBM dumped Lenovo because it was such a money pit.
Today, Dell and HP have to compete not only with Acer and ASUS, but also with Pandigital (electronic picture frames - now tablets), Motorola, HTC, Blackberry, Apple, Archos, Casio, and about a dozen other consumer products manufacturers offering 7 and 10 inch tablets with Android and bluetooth capabilities, not to mention Kindle and Nook, which are Linux powered and put tablets in the $100 range.
> > The impact of MS racketeering on OEMs certainly is diminishing. Not
> > that it's entirely gone, but it's heading in the right direction.
There was once a time when Microsoft's blessing was a guarantee of 20% annualized growth rates, 30-40% profit margins, and minimal support and replacement costs. For this reason, OEMs felt that it would not be possible to sell an entire line of PCs without Windows.
ASUS showed that they could sell millions of NetBooks running only Linux, and Acer followed with their version. According to one maker, on similarly equipped hardware, the Linux device captured 40% of the market.
Microsoft has not done very well in the smaller devices. Even on Netbooks, Windows 7 pretty much killed the market for Netbooks, and the iPad was the final nail in the coffin for Windows 7 based Netbooks. Many retailers are sitting on very stale inventory.
In tablets, the scene has been even worse. Microsoft has been used on Windows 7 tablets - but they typically cost nearly $2,000 and are pretty much standard PCs with SSDs - Windows 7 was just too power hungry.
Windows 6 mobile and Windows 7 mobile have failed to generate any substantial excitement - because Google is doing things that even iPhones can't do with all carriers. With my HTC Thunderbolt, I can talk on the phone, be a wifi hub, and run android apps all at the same time - thanks to that little Linux kernel in the guts of the phone.
Linux in it's Android and Kindle form, are generating awesome sales numbers, and the Sony e-book is not doing too badly either.
With Asus offering Android 3.x on it's 10 inch tablet, along with bluetooth, WiFi and USB a and b ports, it's pretty hard not to look at Android tablets as a real competitor to Windows on PCs. For those who already have a PC, the tablet means they don't have to rush into an upgrade right away. With many companies now stretching their refresh cycles out to 5 years, compared to every 2 years several years ago, the tablet is the best way to get the latest and greatest features and apps.
Even app developers are losing interest in Windows 7 as a sole development platform. Programming for Android and iPhones - using the user interfaces to talk to Linux service applications - has made it much easier to more programming get more support for more platforms, get a bigger piece of a rapidly growing market - using Linux/Unix API and Android/iOS GUI interfaces.
Writing for the Windows 7 API means you might be able to invest $10 million dollars to get your product onto retail shelves and maybe get $7 million in sales before your inventory goes stale, or Microsoft comes out with a competitor product, or Microsoft endorses one of your competitors. AND you can just pay 25% of your off-the-top revenue, since your profits are non-existent.
In the same thread you wrote:
Silly, cheesy, whiny, dishonest, idiotic, scared, childish lunatics.
You and your nanobots who are staging a mutiny on the holodeck.
and
Piece Of Shit.
You eloquence as a writer is astounding.