This is a federated platform. Nobody here is a regular user akin to a tech-illiterate user at a company. Typical users here likely have the ability to read, which is all I needed to install all common (gaming/user-focused) distributions on my hardware.
I gave plenty of reasons why it works better for me. I have no special Linux knowledge and I use an entirely vanilla setup.
but telling others what they must give up to conform to what Linux can do is pushing cult mentality.
If all you're losing is your specialty audiophile hardware, which you paid good money to consume, you're not a regular user. Regular end-user hardware works fine, whether your GPU is NVIDIA or AMD.
You are only providing proof why people should always avoid Linux at all cost.
Unpatched admin account access, sub-par security features/process isolation, and running on the most common operating system targeted by malware is harmful to regular users. Windows Defender sending everything you download to their cloud is an invasion of privacy. No regular user of LTSC would know how to disable Windows Defender or even know how to use the group policy editor to disable exposed sources of telemetry. Since finding a source of LTSC is more difficult for regular users, they'd likely experience less hiccups just downloading a common Linux distribution and putting it on a flash drive. The principles of installing most user-focused Linux distributions are the same as the Windows Installer when proceeding with a graphical setup to write the operating system to your drive.
The reason that recently sparked me to switch to Linux was my bluetooth headphones not receiving audio when my screens turned off on Windows. My microphone frequently not working unless I uninstalled the drivers and rebooted. Take that in for a second. Neither device is uncommon for regular users. No, my computer wasn't going to sleep/hibernating.
It's more likely that the capitalist would just try to rip the inventor off and take full credit for the innovation and out-compete the inventor (unless it was incredibly unique and patented very carefully/licensed to a megacorp).
You basically need to be an expert in patent law to be able to bring a product to market. Even then, it still doesn't prevent copycats from also coming to market and completely obliterating you. You need to engage in lawfare to stop them - a patent is only as good as your ability to enforce it.
Of course, not every innovative product needs to be brought to market for others to enjoy in its unadulterated form and you certainly don't need to profit from or receive credit for your innovations to innovate (which is the point of the meme). Open-source or 3D-printed technology is a net positive for humanity if people have interest to make it themselves or learn from it.