as of today, i'm running vista.
this really isn't through choice, but today the power went out down our street, and took my computer with it. my system registry file corrupted on the outage, which completely fubared that windows install. i'd lost my original win2k disk, and the back up disk i had refused to play ball. i phoned round town looking for a copy of XP (as the lesser of two OS evils), but nowhere had it. i relented and went for home basic. i could of waited for XP to come back in stock, but i am far too impatient, and considering i'd probably install vista at some point anyway, i thought i might as well go for it.
the install went pretty much okay, apart from one major hicup. basically it couldn't assign IP, DNS, gateways, etc. automatically - even though my PSP / XB360 / other PC's can. i spent close to an hour with support, which told me all sorts of shit, such as my router must be incompatible (?!), before messing about myself and getting it going. i'm guessing this must be something to do with their security at the cost of functionality approach.
anyway, other than that it's not too trerrible. i can play all my videos and music, every app i've tried to install so far works, and the driver installation stuff works pretty well. although, coming from win2k (and hating all the XP babysitting stuff), this is the most irritating OS ever. installing a program requires you to confirm that you really want to run/install the program at least twice, and that irritating as fuck, "low disk space warning" thing is still there and pops up every few minutes. i'm hoping once i find my way around it, i'll learn how to turn all that kind of shit off.
for the average user it's probably a step in the right direction. from all the security stuff and messages asking me if "i'm really sure i want to do that", it's going to be a lot harder for stupid people to fuck it up with malware, or delete important things. for people like me, it's still quite usable - just a bit irritating.