Yeah. My experience with Linux was totally different! When I first got it to boot, my ethernet card didn't work. I found a place - at nasa.gov as I recall - where I could find the latest drivers (my card used "tulip.so"). I downloaded the latest "tulip.c". Fortunately, there were instructions for how to compile it - it was a very long command line to gcc! ("command lines", really) I'd never have guessed it, or found it by trial-and-error! I compiled it, put it in place, and rebooted, and... holy crap, my ethernet card worked! "Look Ma, I'm a Unix Guru!" Well, it turned out to be "beginner's luck", but it gave me a good attitude to start with. If the installer had frozen, I probably wouldn't like Linux either! Well, I'd never know if I liked it or not...
Keith says "turn off ACPI". Okay but that's still a "bug" in the installer (IMO). It should, ideally, detect this situation, and advise us, or offer to turn it off for us. In sharp contrast to Windows, Linux cordially invites us to fix these problems, if we have the skill. If we don't have the skill (usual), we are invited to get a friend to do it, or even hire somebody to do it (or just report it and hope that it'll get fixed). If Windows doesn't work like we want/need/expect, we're pretty much stuck!
I observe that some people say, "Linux works great! Even my grandmother uses it!", but other people have endless trouble with it. I would expect "Windows Wienies" (present company not included) to have trouble with it, but I'm talking about guys who have written (and sold, in some cases) their own OS, and know quite well what they're doing! I conclude that "it's not for everybody". This may be due to hardware differences, but I think Linux just doesn't like some people! Most days, Linux likes me!
Best,
Frank