I mainly use windows so I can play as many of the games I own as I can.
Valve is really trying to get the Linux client up to snuff! Granted, it will take a long time for
every game to be ported, but hey.
I would have linux as well if it weren't for some idiotic person over at Dell who decided it was a good idea to prevent you from booting into any OS other than the one that comes with the laptop unless you don't mind your computer not turning on at all ever again without any warning that they do this.
Every "official" Win 8 computer does this.
Dell is bad. Build your own machine!
I had mine built by a Linux vendor!
I use Windows 7 at the moment, and I'm kind of tempted by Windows 8. I also know that, as a (mathematician U computer scientist) I need to familiarize myself with some Linux platform at some point. Suggestions? I want easy to use and stable. Doesn't have to be particularly interesting.
Having done my fair share of distro-hopping, I am a firm believer the Ubuntu family are the "easiest" for the reasons of: a) easy OS installation (and easy partitioning), b) easy software installation (and maintenance through PPAs). The 12.x family (12.04 is long-term support, 12.10 is more bleeding edge) is actually really stable IMO, especially for Ubuntu. It's not going to Debian stable, of course, but that's because it's not Debian. Unity 5 has come a long way; if you want to try a modern (read: different) UI, try regular Ubuntu. The HUD is so very great for keyboard enthusiasts like me. Xubuntu (with the XFCE desktop) would be your best bet, I think, if you want something more traditional/less flashy but customisable. I've convinced less tech-savvy folk that it's XP.
Mint also exists, but stability issues are what always push me away. Being third wheel with a heavily tweaked and/or immature (as in age) desktop environment, it suffers in that respect.
Yeah, but I so happen to really really need Java. For school.
On the other hand, good ol' Adobe Flash works - Youtube works...
You actually do not need Flash for YouTube if you're using an HTML5 compatible browser!
I have an Ubuntu VM lying around as well, but haven't really used it to any degree. I've been encountering an increasing number of "oh hai this only works on Linux sorry" recently, but somehow I suspect the opposite effect if I switched would end up being worse with things I take for granted.
Have you then considered running Windows in a VM!
i find Mac OS X to be tolerable if I can install something sane like gnome2 or xfce on it.
I didn't know that was even possible haha. All I know is everyone's Mac I've ever seen looks the exact same. (Also I'm on the "I hate OS X" boat. So so so very many usability flaws, especially for us lefties.)
As for Adobe Trash, it's actually built into Chrome. In fact, that's the only place you'll find it for Linux. They stopped developing the standalone plugin, or will stop sometime soon. Sorry, Firefox users (if there are still any of those around).
There are plenty. I hate Chrome.
You could just use all Ubuntu releases pre-Maverick (pre-11.04. or .10? I forget. D:) They all use GNOME 2.
I don't suggest this at all. You run the risk of broken/unsupported packages. If you *really* want GNOME 2 and don't mind old software, there is Debian.
For memory efficiency, you could try out LXDE, but if you like xfce, what can I say?
LXDE would indeed be for memory conservation if you really need it. XFCE is much prettier, I think.