...are you saying the move from OS9 to OSX was insignificant?
I find it to be insignificant. Perhaps in the Mac world it was significant at the time of the change, but compared to everywhere else, not so much. OS X is based on UNIX, which is 30+ years old.
When issing the rm -rf command make sure you not only use "*", but in addition use ".*". Using "*" or "*.*" doesn't get everyhing.
rm -rf * .*
You absoliutely don't want to leave anything behind. ;-)
I moved away from TB to Mail.app. It's not perfect, but the feature-set of Mail.app and the plugins I use (MailTags) make it so much better. The only things for Mail.app I ask for are fixes in IMAP support. The main one being showing as new, mail which has already been read. The other which is being able to subscribe and unsubscribe to folders.
Entourage had a tendancy for the data files to get quite bloated, even when cleaning them up, compressing them, etc (The util which opens when you hold down option as you open Entourage).
I'm glad Mail.app doesn't have NNTP functionality. It's a mail client and that's all I want, mail. If I want NNTP, I'll open up my Unison.
I moved from TB to Mail.app only a few months ago because of the lack of support for Apple's Address Book. If I didn't use the default iCal and Address Book for a lot of what I do, I would consider moving back. I do not like having multiple copies of the same information.
I can see your point. And turn the tables... What if a die-hard Windows user were forced to choose between a Mac with an Internet connection and a PC without? Which would they choose?
I, however, disagree with your point "the OS is dead". Without an OS (of any form), the Internet doesn't exist.
I recently purchased a Mini for my parents to replace their aging PC. The phone has been silent when it comes to support calls. I'm loving it. I set up their machine so I could remote manage it and I couldn't ask for a better situation.
Are Today's Operating Systems Behind the Times?
And They Said the Mac Was Intuitive
Why I Stopped Using Mozilla Thunderbird
AAM: Migrating from Mail 2.0 to Thunderbird 1.5
Wherein John Gruber Picks Windows
Boot Camp: Apple's Insanely Bad Idea
Setting Up Your Parents On A Mac