>For someone who seems to really enjoy using and telling others >about Linux, I am surprised you suggest ATI products. Their binary drivers are >improving, but still dismal to say the least.
Point taken, but with OpenSuse 10.1 you get OpenGL support using a Radeon chip with a click of a button. This is much better than the "old" mesa drivers. It's true that performance is better using ATI's drivers but for plug-and-play-openGL out of the box OpenSuSE 10.1's drivers work well. I was also impressed by the third-party RPM support for the extra media plugins (links found here):
http://www.desktoplinux.com/articles/AT2703022234.html
>Also, MESA in conjunction with the OSS ATI drivers are passable sure, but not >nearly what the performance should be.
ATI is facing competitive pressure from Intel (don't laugh, they're apparently open-sourcing their 3D linux drivers for their integrated graphics chips which are actually getting pretty decent with DDR2 memory support) and NVidia (still binary as far as I know but there's the easy to use tiny-nvidia-installer which works really well). Things are improving very quickly.
>And while I won't disagree with you that there are great games for Linux (I >personally love Chromium and Torcs), there are some instances where the >game/genre isn't (yet) available in Linux natively.