Preparing for October 2025
I'm pretty much the textbook example of the type of user this appeals to.
I've been an on and off again Unix user since 1983. I've booted Nixdorf and Siemens boxes, I spent five years developing on pre-Oracle Sun machines (the ipcs and ipxs that predated Sparc), HP/UX, and a number of others, and I migrated SCO Xenix stuff to Red Hat and Mandrake in the late 1990s.
Although I frequently ran my backup PCs on some Linux flavour over the past 20 years (whether Mandriva, Ubuntu, or something else), my primary machines were always Windows (XP/7/10). But while Linux was fantastic for firewalls, backup servers, NTP servers, download boxes, FTP transfers, etc., the desktop experience simply wasn't enough to justify a switch, especially since I was working in Windows at the office.
That's not to say that Linux was bad, or incapable. It wasn't. But there really was nothing to justify switching away from a working Windows system. If it was "just as good", or even a little better, that didn't warrant the effort of switching; there was not enough benefit to justify it.
Until now.
The sheer amount of telemetry and spying that Windows 10 does, and the amount of effort required to neuter all the data collection is absurd, and unacceptable. As the saying goes, you're either the customer or the product. But with Windows, you're now both.
With free online services, you expect, and accept, that they will collect some data and/or provide advertisements. With a commercial operating system that you pay money for, the vendor should not be collecting your data, or shoving advertisements onto your machine, but Microsoft is doing both.
That alone sours the desire to stay on Windows. Fortunately, there are lots of free "decrapifiers" that make Windows less intolerable (if not great) on the privacy front, and ways to get past the MS requirement that you have an online Windows account to use your PC. But why on earth should users be fighting against their OS vendor, trying to defeat OS functions that they don't want in the first place? And not only that, they pay for the privilege.
Add to that the fact that many fully functional Windows 10 PCs won't run Windows 11 (mine say they won't), and that means in October 2025, people must either run an insecure and unsupported operating system (a bad idea), throw out perfectly good hardware (just as bad an idea), or switch to Linux.
So, I've switched one PC to Mint, with the other dual booting Zorin and Windows. And although I've tried MX, I wasn't really that enthralled with it. Zorin wins in terms of easy migration off of Windows, Mint wins in terms of customization, and both are excellent choices. Unlike 15 years ago, the software available for Linux is largely on par with Windows (at least for home users), so it really won't be that difficult to turn off Windows next year (and if necessary, it can be run in a VM with network connectivity disabled on a Linux box).
The sad thing is that it's not so much that Linux made a compelling case for people to move to it, but that Microsoft made a compelling case to move away from Windows.