Crayon
Member
every "issue" with Windows a normal user will encounter are subjective ones or slight inconveniences . like, do you want Windows search to search the web? if you don't care, you don't have to do anything... if you don't want it you do a registry edit and it's gone.
or sometimes the explorer is a bit slow.
Linux issues are way more in your face and can't be ignored.
My main reference point for Linux is the Steam Deck, which uses probably the most stable and most user-friendly Linux distro you could ever ask for. it gets maintained by a multi billion dollar company, and gets tons of user/hobbyist support as well.
yet, the amount of things I have to manually fix simply to get programs and games working correctly in the short time I had the Deck, already outnumber the times I had to do similar things on any Windows version since around XP SP2, which is a whole 2 decades ago.
any problem fixing I do on Windows is stuff I do because I can, not because I have to.
I don't need my task bar to be at the top for the PC to function, but I like it on the top, so I manually "fixed" that. I also don't want my search to search the web, so I "fixed" that too. I don't want copilot to do anything on my PC... so I "fixed" it.
all of that was fully optional. it was essentially me customising my Windows install.
actually using the PC and using programs or playing games never gave me any issues.
but in order to play Pumpkin Jack on my Steam Deck by installing the Epic Store copy of it that I have, I had to look through multiple forums to find out how it doesn't give me a black screen on FMV sequences. and the fix was insanely esoteric and nonsensical too, so I'd probably have never found the solution on my on (I had to use a specific old Proton version, and set the app to windows 7 mode I think... which makes no sense... it's a relatively modern UE4 game from 2020...)
Okay so you didn't have to 'fix' the disaster integrated ai system. What did you have to fix on you steam deck to restore usability?