Yeah, Linux is a LOT easier to use than it was 20 years ago. Honestly in many ways it can be the type of thing that if you want someone to have a PC that's largely just a dumb terminal / web browser, I'd rather set up a Linux system than Windows because they don't know enough to screw it up, and there's not a large group out there trying to write Linux viruses. It's like a Chromebook, but completely open and not locked into the Google world.
But now Linux is pretty simple to do most everything using the GUI. But if you know how to get under the hood with command line, you get WAY more control than that.
Yeah, and it's real lightweight too, which is why I stick it on my old PC's once the hardware is obsolete. I've had trouble with Linux natively recognizing the touchpad on Dell laptops, but it's gotten easier and easier over the years to load the driver. I want to say the last time I installed it, it recognized the problem and offered to get the driver for me. It's been a couple years, I might be misremembering. I like the Mint distro. Ubuntu is probably the "flagship"--if Linux has such a thing--and I hear it can do more stuff, but I think Mint is the easiest for somebody coming from the Windows world, so it's mostly what I've used. It also has native apps that I really enjoy. Rhythmbox, for example, is a fantastic music manager for my tastes. It's everything iTunes used to be before Apple lost its damn mind in 2011 starting with iTunes version 11. I despise iTunes now as a music manager, but Rhythmbox on Linux? Wonderful.
I wouldn't mind learning Linux, I'm just not motivated to do it. There's no work benefit for me, and I've never come across something in personal use that made me wish I knew how to utilize the command line. Maybe if I knew more about what's possible I'd be more interested. I pretty much stay away from it unless I'm trying to fix some little issue and I've looked up how to do something.
I have to use the command prompt in Windows sometimes for Python stuff, for work and when I was in school. But I mostly don't use that either.
When I gather the money, I want to build a new desktop with 4 hard drive spaces. I don't like dual-boot, partitioned-drive setups because I've found it causes some glitches on the Windows side. I'm gonna install Windows on one drive, Linux on another, and my files will be located on a third so I don't have to reload everything every few years when a Linux distro stops being supported and I have to install a new version. I'll leave the 4th blank, but eventually I'd aim to make myself a Hackintosh. For as much as I dislike Macs, it does have music software I like that is simply not available on any other platform.