The total number of Secunia advisories for all versions of Mozilla, Firefox, and Netscape using the post-Netscape 4 codebase is 35, when accounting for those that cross multiple versions and products. Yes, I checked all of the entries, and compared all of the SA numbers. IE6SP2 still has ten open vulnerabilities (12321, 12806, 12889, 13124, 13156, 13203, 13317, 13251, 13404, and 13482). You're trying to pick one particular revision of IE to counterbalance the entire history of the Mozilla project, and it's not working. I haven't been fooled by anything.
You're a walking dictionary of logical fallacies. Exclusion, straw man, composition, popularity, attacking the person, slothful induction... and those are just the ones on the surface.
By the way, I use Windows on a daily basis in my job as a network engineer on a 14,000-user network. My job revolves around Windows. I'm reasonably good at Linux, but it's not my core skillset. In contrast to most of my peers, I still see a mixed network as the actual best solution. I have my preference of brand for servers, which is not the same preference I have for desktops, which is not the same preference that I have for notebooks. In all three cases, though, I'm not tied to that brand by some blind loyalty, and will accept something new if it is demonstrably better.
I still would like to see five top Windows techs and five top Linux techs be given the same hardware to set up networks for 10, 100, 1000, and 10,000 people (with workstation traffic simulations). Neither side seems to want to do that, even though it's the only way to really point out the strengths and weaknesses in the platforms. Everyone chooses some specific point on which to compete, instead of the overall best, which makes sense at the low end -- you can't expect one person or even a group of people to be able to afford what it takes to do this -- but everyone at the high end is worried about losing business if the other side proves to be better.
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