Comfort is a big reason. But if you have a sacrificial used laptop and start familiarise yourself with it.
I started using Linux a few years ago, and from bottom of my heart advise you don’t touch Arch (CachyOS) with a 10 feet pole. You need experience to differentiate bullshit solutions when you search forums. For example I just saw a thread saying you need to modify kernel modules if you want to change the touchpad sensitivity of a wireless keyboard.
I also advise you against Nobara, just use Fedora KDE. Because it’s unofficially maintained often breaks or just bugs after large updates. As a novice It was easier for me just to reinstall than fix.
Comfort is a big reason. But if you have a sacrificial used laptop and start familiarise yourself with it.
I started using Linux a few years ago, and from bottom of my heart advise you don’t touch Arch (CachyOS) with a 10 feet pole. You need experience to differentiate bullshit solutions when you search forums. For example I just saw a thread saying you need to modify kernel modules if you want to change the touchpad sensitivity of a wireless keyboard.
I also advise you against Nobara, just use Fedora KDE. Because it’s unofficially maintained often breaks or just bugs after large updates. As a novice It was easier for me just to reinstall than fix.