Fortunately this kind of thinking slowly but surely gets defeated, although we still have to fight for every inch of user-friendliness (and even modern security concepts) against elitists.
Unfortunately right now most documentation is still crap for average users, and people who keep repeating bullshit like "it's better to provide CLI commands because they're universal" (actual nonsense people keep saying) don't make it better. The situation is so phenomenally bad that I'd outright assume Mistral AI with "Reflection" on to be more useful to newcomers when looking for solutions (on case a friendly professional or enthusiast isn't available), because that thing is less likely to provide an outdated command for the wrong distro than a google search. Which is an absolutely abysmal place to be in for Linux as a whole if we want to keep the rising adoption train going.
This. Terminology, unknown concepts (some simply expected to be known, such as standard parameter syntax) and a lack of simple examples to understand all the abstract explanations with (like the way 'tealdeer' presents it) make manpages utterly useless to anyone but powerusers with lots of time and an interest in the topic.
Someone saying "RTFM" unironically in regards to Linux is basically a red flag for new users at this point. Not because reading manuals was bad, but because the manuals provided are simply awful. They're developer- and expert-friendly, not user-friendly.
And perhaps TTFM.
Translate the fucking manual either from broken chinese-english or the tech-lingo + missing context information which is almost every manpage on Linux, making it nearly useless for the average user unless you got hours and hours of time to understand all the adjacent concepts and commands.
Not sure about the availability in your region, however I have good experiences with AVM Fritz!Box routers. They are proprietary but extremely easy and reliable without sacrifycing security or features. They're from a german company and basically the go-to router vendor here by both ISPs and in retail.
This, so much this. Although it's equally old grumpy farts as well as script kiddies. You'll be able to identify the former by their trademark quote "Systemd is the end of / nail in the coffin for Linux".
In a few decades we'll have Linux rainbow press delivering the newest (partially made-up) drama of Linux celebs and influencers to the senior Linux users sitting in their electric FOSS rocking chairs, talking about the good ol' days with X11, SysVinit and no god damn sandboxing or immutability.
The description in the first photo about int - steing comparison is incomplete though, right? Wasn't there also a rule anout which one of then comes first (the second parameter gets converted?), and what happens if a string contains non-numeric values?
Not a problem with Linux. Pipewire works great and offers everything you need from an audio backend, there are great DAWs like Bitwig and Reaper and a good collection of compatible plugins as well. The main problem is hardware, which isn't the fault of Linux but hardware manufacturers.
That's guilt by association. Their viewpoint is awful.
I also wished there was no security at the gate of concerts, but I happily accept it if that means actual security (if done reasonably of course). And quite frankly, cute anime girl doing some math is so, so much better than those god damn freaking captchas. Or the service literally dying due to AI DDoS.
Edit: Forgot to mention, proof of work wasn't invented by or for crypto currency or blockchain. The concept exists since the 90's (as an idea for Email Spam prevention), making their argument completely nonsensical.
Fortunately this kind of thinking slowly but surely gets defeated, although we still have to fight for every inch of user-friendliness (and even modern security concepts) against elitists.
Unfortunately right now most documentation is still crap for average users, and people who keep repeating bullshit like "it's better to provide CLI commands because they're universal" (actual nonsense people keep saying) don't make it better. The situation is so phenomenally bad that I'd outright assume Mistral AI with "Reflection" on to be more useful to newcomers when looking for solutions (on case a friendly professional or enthusiast isn't available), because that thing is less likely to provide an outdated command for the wrong distro than a google search. Which is an absolutely abysmal place to be in for Linux as a whole if we want to keep the rising adoption train going.