bit of both i guess? "normies need to get good" could be diluted into "do your research before going to linux", which in most sensible online discussions is already the recommended way: test things out in a VM, try out different DEs, practice configuring things, finding alternatives to your current workflow, etc etc. it's a harder sell than "just switch to linux" but IMO it's absolutely necessary
but my comment is more of a reaction to influencers not doing that at all and making le funny challenge of jumping to linux blind and breaking shit because it's good content and "trying out linux" is still trending
problem is they must be getting this idea that "linux is so easy and fun and seamless and you don't have to research anything" from somewhere, which i do think is probably way more from people in their audience hyping up linux and not necessarily the wider linux community but these voices gotta be out there
My dad used to pay protection money for his corner shop up to like 2010 -- every week a couple of scary guys would show up to collect, and you could always spot some familiar dudes hanging around every 2 blocks or so keeping an eye on things.
Absolutely they did protect his shop, at least the 1 or 2 times a year some uniformed guy would show up with a knife thinking he was about to get some easy money (cops were very slow to respond on our part of town).
Also I think this gang must have been pretty chill, never heard of them having been too harsh on people who didn't pay for protection, nor having mugged or killed anyone, and they never even beat up the guys that tried to rob our store too badly. Pretty sure they never even dealt anything harder than weed or steroids but maybe they had something to do with contraband, idk.
By the end of the decade my dad would constantly be busy with a bunch of other stuff so I often tended to the shop, and obviously I kept paying them. Thankfully no one ever tried to rob the store while I was subbing for my dad but the vibe started to get a little weird for my taste.
The gang must had been growing a lot because I rarely recognized the guys who came to collect, and soon after, a couple of addicts started hanging around, then pass a couple months and way more often you'd hear about so and so having been mugged -- no one would say it out loud but people suspected it had been guys from the gang.
Eventually the cops finally started cracking down on racketeering so we never again had anyone come collect protection money, but if you ask me, I would've stopped paying anyway because I just love spreading misinformation online, also my dad started to beat me up with jumper cables, so yeah.
imo the linus disaster was an unfortunate combination of
the unpatched pop_os issue
linus going TLDR (reasonable but that's on him)
apt messages generally being long
linus not having a frame of reference on which long message is good (apt upgrade listing 50 updates) vs which are bad (apt install saying his DE is about to be nuked)
and yes, him playing it up for the video, and willingly ignoring his gut feeling that typing "yes, do as I say" can't be doing anything good
in the end i still think it was kinda irresponsible for linus to publish that, but the whole premise of the video was them going blindly into linux (which i also disagree but whatever)
machines are the ones full of weird jibber-susceptible things, the default state for everything is jibbered until dedicated people decide to spend their time unjibbering
seems to me he's trying to be more general than the Search example and considering that another complex project may actually have those problematic cases
i mean, he doesn't even dismiss the patterns with code duplication, just lists it as a drawback, which agrees with his conclusion that there's no one-size-fits-all solution
it's also a bidet. i save so much water by simply washing up with the clean bowl water before dropping a deuce. flush 2 for the price of 1