A truth: About once a year, someone proclaims very loudly that Linux is Dead with a capital "D" and that Microsoft, once again, is kicking the crap out of it in terms of market share. This year’s honor goes to Robin Harris at ZDNet with the article Windows kicks Linux to the curb.
Personally speaking I don’t think there’s any real way to know the true number of how many people are running Linux on the desktop or laptop. You can’t base it on sales of new computers because people can easily uninstall Windows and put Linux on a computer box. You can’t base it on web traffic statistics because someone using a Windows OS might be using a Linux OS next month – or maybe running a dual-boot system – or maybe using virtual session Windows inside Linux. You just never know.
Per the article linked above, netbook share does not dictate how much Linux is used or isn’t used – that much I know.
I think it’s safe to say Linux does have a foothold in the market simply for the reason people actually know what is and have heard of it. Is it the leading OS when bundled with new computers? No, and it never has been. This is because most people download it instead of actually buy it.
So.. yeah. Linux is "dead" yet again. But for a corpse it seems to be doing quite well.

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