I actually do not fully agree to the what happens part of the description.
I would change it to:
2. Observe that a majority of PCs for sale have Microsoft software 
pre-installed.
3. Observe very few PCs with Ubuntu, Mandriva, or any other non-Microsoft 
software.

What should happen:
1. PC:s for sale should ship with a spectra of different software 
pre-installed. Microsoft Windows, Ubuntu, Mandriva, OS/2 or whatever would be 
able to exist on an OPEN market.
2. Opens standards should make it easy to switch between operating systems 
without sacrificing support for hardware and software. 
3. Ubuntu should be marketed in a way such that its amazing features and
 benefits would be apparent and known by all.
4. Healthy competition shall make the systems and more user friendly as time 
passes. 

This is not about free vs. non-free. This is about one dominating company vs. 
everything else.
One thing that is needed is open standard. Writing an operating system should 
not be about writing drivers for hundreds of devises. Standards should exists 
for drivers. Like OSKit or I/O Kit. Hince there should not have to be Linux 
drivers, FreeBSD drivers or Windows drivers, just Standard Drivers. For 
applications we already have standards, both de jure and de facto. We have 
Posix, Single Unix and OpenGL. We also have informal platform independent 
standard libraries like Gnome, Qt, KDE, SQLight and many many other things that 
is very portable. OSKit may include a bit to much implementation and I/O Kit 
may have licensing problem. A standard may provide som implementation, but it 
should be more of a framework that allows developers to plug in code that is 
kernel-specific, such as the IP stack. The optimal solution would be if 
compiled kernel modules could be loaded by any kernel that implements the 
standard, making them as portable as elf executables.

Even the functionality within a kernel could be standardized. For
example if both FreeBSD and Linux kernels was based on such a standard,
it would be easy to make a hybrid kernel, for example a Linux kernel
with a FreeBSD scheduler and IP stack. It could as easy as just setting
configuration in a common build system.

> 
> Steps to repeat:
> 
> 1. Visit a local PC store.
> 
> What happens:
> 2. Observe that a majority of PCs for sale have non-free software 
> pre-installed.
> 3. Observe very few PCs with Ubuntu and free software pre-installed.
> 
> What should happen:
> 1. A majority of the PCs for sale should include only free software like 
> Ubuntu.
> 2. Ubuntu should be marketed in a way such that its amazing features and 
> benefits would be apparent and known by all.
> 3. The system shall become more and more user friendly as time passes.
> 
> 
> 
> To unsubscribe from this bug, go to:
> https://bugs.launchpad.net/clubdistro/+bug/1/+subscribe
                                          
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-- 
Microsoft has a majority market share
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu 4
dz, which is a direct subscriber.

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Status in Tilix Linux: New

Bug description:
Microsoft has a majority market share in the new desktop PC marketplace.
This is a bug, which Ubuntu is designed to fix.

Non-free software is holding back innovation in the IT industry, restricting 
access to IT to a small part of the world's population and limiting the ability 
of software developers to reach their full potential, globally. This bug is 
widely evident in the PC industry.

Steps to repeat:

1. Visit a local PC store.

What happens:
2. Observe that a majority of PCs for sale have non-free software pre-installed.
3. Observe very few PCs with Ubuntu and free software pre-installed.

What should happen:
1. A majority of the PCs for sale should include only free software like Ubuntu.
2. Ubuntu should be marketed in a way such that its amazing features and 
benefits would be apparent and known by all.
3. The system shall become more and more user friendly as time passes.





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