Fine - I'll jump in.
to #7:
First of all, you mean "incomprehensible".
Secondly, you're missing pretty much the entire picture - it must be nice living in your reality. OSX wouldn't cause any sort of an "atom explosion" on the OS market if they released it for a larger hardware base for a plethora of different reasons.
First is UX (user experience). You may feel that OSX has a better UX story than Windows, but try telling that to the millions of people who use Windows every day. You put them in front of a Mac and they're lost. Companies that use Windows PCs today aren't going to switch to OSX because they're not going to retrain all their users. If they did, the net productivity loss during "re-learning" would be astounding. No company would incur that loss.
Second is the lack of application support. Companies aren't going to rewrite their POS or LOB applications for OSX, and Win32 apps don't run on OSX. And don't pull out VirtualPC as an excuse here. Companies aren't going to shell out the cash for OSX, the retraining, the deployment costs, the purchase of the new applications, and then spend more money of virtualization software to run Windows. Without applications support, OSX is a toy.
Third - and probably the most simple - is that, in general, people aren't going to go run out and buy OSX for home-use if they use Windows at work. People tend to like to stick with what they know - especially if it works for them. If they've got Windows at work, it's pretty unlikely that they're going to do something to their home environment that would make it more difficult to interoperate with their work environment.
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