No offense, but your reasoning is totally off. First off, as you can see this phone may not be a netbook, but it does indeed replace one for a large percentage of users. not you? Well that's fine, but that doesn't apply to everyone. I was planning on getting a netbook on Black Friday, and now that I have my droid, I find I won't need one. I spend all of my desk time on my quad core, with 8 gigs of memory, a 7 Mbt line and two 24' Dells (not saying any of that to sound pompous of course. These days that is not that impressive at all.. especially with what some of the ubergeeks on here probably run

So yeah, I do most of my computing on an actual computer. But do I need to spend another 300 bucks on a tiny netbook with a tiny screen that strains my eyes on long useage that is only powerful enough to let me check my email, do some light web browsing and watch some movies/music? When I can do all that plus GPS, apps, games, sms calls video photos and a high speed signal whereever I go already? .. I just don't see the need. In my personal opinion. A normal laptop? sure, I can totally see that.
And as far as the drivers for peripherals
"making the device utterly unstable and unsupportable". That's just silly. this device already incorporates code waay more intense than drivers, and if well written the Android OS could run them just fine. Plus, drivers are meant to be used by those who need them, so the only people who would actually install them, are those who want to run said peripherals.
There are already hundreds of crappily coded apps in the Market that are
way worse for your Droid than installing a driver. it wouldn't be a problem at all.
And before the iphone and Android (and even blackberry in some sense) Windows Mobile phones were the exact definition of mainstream. I don't know about you, but when I hear the word "Microsoft" the absolute first thing that comes to mind is
"appeal to the non-technical mass audience". That's pretty much the definition of Microsoft. Now yes, the iphone and now Android are dominating the smartphone market and have made things even more simpler and more marketable to the mainstream, but the whole Windows Mobile thing is actually the exact opposite of what you said.
So anyways, not trying to "jump down your throat", everyone is entitled to their opinion, but I totally agree with the OP in my humble one.