No worries, my biggest gripe is consumer gear which tends to focus on windows while having issues in linux. I run into no issues with company supplied stuff or purpose built systems. The 2 latest laptops i got recently for personal use are a cheap dell inspiron 10th gen intel that is ubuntu certified and a walmart brand motile 14 no name laptop. Ironically the dell has been a train wreck bios wise in windows and linux. The update fixed the ACPI issues in windows but not linux and then the function keys so far haven't been possible to correct. At the same time the no name walmart brand one was plug and play with linux so it goes both ways.
Valid points. Nothing is 100% perfect, not Windows, not Linux. But Windows is ageing, the NT kernel cannot last forever, the NTFS file system with it's limitations cannot last forever and considering Microsoft own Github, considering Microsoft are the biggest contributors to Github, considering Edge is moving to a Chromium base and being made available under Linux, considering MS Teams has recently been made available under Linux, considering Microsoft's more profitable cloud based division runs under Linux and considering WSL - I see little doubt that eventually Microsoft will move to the Linux kernel with a locked down DE based around the current Windows interface.
Honestly, I don't understand the blind love for a dying OS. Considering Linux is actually the more modern OS, embrace it, learn about it and use it every chance you get - You don't have to dump Windows overnight, not by a long shot; But the more you build familiarity with the OS, the better off you'll be in the long run.
I just installed Detroit: Become Human via Lutris. The process was every bit as simple as under Windows and the game plays perfectly at either 1080p or 4k - It's actually a very impressive title, the graphics pop and being a Vulkan based game I'd be surprised if it ran any faster under Windows, in fact considering Linux is technically the faster OS I wouldn't be at all surprised if it ran faster under Linux.
Peace, I don't want to argue over an OS of all things.