They just want to turn it on and use it.


People really want their PC to be their personal computer, to be intuitive and work the way it does in science fiction. They want it to be a general purpose machine as it was promised to be.

Remember the way an 80-year-old approaches a PC or Mac for the first time? CPUs have enough power, and memory is cheap enough now, that it should be possible for PCs to have discoverable interfaces and built-in capabilities to allow a reasonable person to figure out how to make a PC do what they want. It's the legacy of Windows that's holding that capability back.

Cheers,
Scott.