You can buy computers with Linux pre-installed nowadays too.
I used to use Windows exclusively until about 4 years ago. Up to the time i switched, I occasionally was testing a few Linux distros, and repeatedly came to the conclusion that drivers were still an issue, and that Linux wasn't ready for the average user's desktop.
Not so anymore, since about 2009. From that time on, the only thing without a Linux driver I encountered (there are many more, just not that widespread that it should matter) was an HP printer. Which is why I stopped using Windows altogether.
My experience since then? Windows is a royal PITA to use and maintain. Linux, with KDE as the desktop manager, isn't just faster, it's way friendlier for users. One example, which to me is huge: on Windows, you need to run the updater of every f..ing software provider from which you have purchased an app. On Linux, there's just one updater for everything. another one: on Windows, even with all the discount programs for students and others, you have to spend thousands of dollars before you get equivalents of all apps installed that you get for free when you select developer workstation for a Linux installer.
Agreed, games are the only thing that Linux doesn't yet cover as well as Windows - both development and play. However, wanna bet that Linux will tip the balance in this area too, in at most five years?