One of the great things about Linux is that it is so much better about reporting what actually went wrong with the system when it does crash. Back in about '97 or so there was a series of articles acknowledging something that us hardware techs knew - the now that Linux was a significant presence and was reporting the actual reasons for crashes we were discovering that it wasn't Windows that was responsible for the crashes. Around the time the Pentium 166 came out there was a serious improvement in motherboard reliability that, combined with OEMSR2 of Windows 95 made for some marvelously stable systems. Windows 95 is not significantly crash prone. There is software that will lock and crash it, but in itself it is a stable, reliable OS. One of the most reliable ways to get it to perform badly, lock up, and crash is to run Novell products on it. With the exception of crashes caused by Internet Explorer and Outlook 98, I have a Win95 system that has not had a "crash" since 1998. From 1995 through 1998, I solved problem after problem on Windows 95, 98, and NT systems by eliminating Novell traffic from the local network, removing the Novell clients, and pithing the Novell servers. NT servers were consistently more reliable on the same hardware. If you're crashing Windows 95, you're a) running Novell on it, b) running some third-party software on it that isn't W95 compatible, or c) running it on bad hardware. Admittedly, without the ability to run third-party software on it an OS is pretty pointless, but it remains that it's not W95 that's unstable. The point is if you have Linux, who needs Novell?