you can wait and then you could burn it on a disc and then you could make that CD that you burned of Linux and use it on your home PC
Generally, you can download images (.iso files) from the internet. Some websites/companies will ship copies on usbs or cd/dvds.
Generally yes. Most Linux versions will work on a standard home PC, and many will work on one too old and slow to run Windows.
No, Linux is an operating system. Judging from the category: Your PS3 would be considered a PC after having Linux installed on it.
you don't unless you install Linux on it and install wine from Linux and only some games can play in Linux so stick to playing PC games on the PC
Absolutely. Linux will work fine on an Apple Mac PC. Linux can also be used for a selection of other computer brands.
You can use this scanner with any type of computer you have, be it Mac, PC or Linux. The Linux will take some work to install, but you can easily find Mac and PC drivers online.
a hackintosh is just a normal pc set up to run mac, most pc's run linux fine.
Yes. Linux can run on minimal machines and on very old machines, back to 386 processors, but you'll probably lose the graphical user interface. You need to use a copy of Linux from one of the specialist distributions.
Yes, of course.
Downloading Linux distributions is the easiest way. You can usually order a CD as well. I know that the Ubuntu website gives users an opportunity to download or purchase the CD. I think all you need to pay is shipping costs. Another great way to experiment with Linux is by installing it onto a USB drive. PenDriveLinux is a program that will automatically download a linux distribution and copy the iso file onto a USB drive. You can then plug in the USB stick into your computer, restart and in most cases have linux pop up without any hassle. If you want to download that software (it's free) just Google pendrivelinux.
All pcs can run Linux. Specifically, you can download and run Ubuntu, which is Linux based. Any PC can run Ubuntu and/or dual-boot Windows and Ubuntu.
Linux is not an exact copy of any previous operating system. It is modeled after various Unix and Unix-like systems.