I really doubt FCP is gonna come to the PC. There is no reason for Apple to port one of it's flagship proggies (Many editors I know bought Macs soley because of FCP) over to PCs. And since none of the Mac rumor sites, which watch Apple like a hawk, have mentioned this rumor, I must conclude that someone was talking outta their butt.
And, IMO (and Hollywood's) FCP 2.x or 3.0 is far better to edit with than Premiere 6 (FCP 1.x should be compared to Premiere 5.x). I find the FCP interface to be much more intuitive<sp?> and less cluttered than the Premiere 6 interface (I've been using them both since June of '01. Before that I was editing w/AVID's MC Xpress software). Also, Apple is making FCP compatable with high end software. For example, you can edit "offline" (think draft quality) on FCP then output the editing timeline and edit "online"(think finish quality) using, for example, AVID Symphony. And "offlining" using FCP is about $80,000 cheaper than using AVID Media Composer (Which is what many people "offline" with). FCP 3.0 also utilizes OMF audio files so audio can travel "freely" between FCP and, let's say, Pro-Tools (no need to render or change file types). FCP 3.0 also has the ability to do realtime previews of FX and transitions (this used to require additional hardware). The one thing that I really like 'bout Premiere 6, though, is it's real time audio mixer. That thing is very nice to have.
Where Adobe is trying to make Premiere all self contained and stand alone, Apple is making FCP able to work with other software that man pro's use while still making it a great stand alone proggie.
My home machine is a PC running Premiere 6 and I can't really complain. That said, I have a copy of FCP 3.0 sitting on my desk and I'm waiting for the faster G4s or G5s to be released.
end rant
DV