I've been a lifetime Windows user and I just recently switched to Linux Mint. It's really come a long way since I last tried it 1-2 years ago.
Actually, I've been having far more problems with Windows 10 than with Linux (just today it decided to make my speakers sound awful and nothing seems to fix it). And for some reason, Windows problems seem a lot more difficult to solve, even though I've been using it for 20 years.
That's not true and it's a disservice to Linux.
Ubuntu will work out of the box.
So will it variants.
Probably applies to current Fedora variants as well.
Ubuntu have done really well with 'it just works'; it's the only distro that installs out of the box with the correct Broadcom driver for my Mac Mini. While I could of gone for Arch like I normally do, it was nice for a change to have an installer I can walk away from and let it do its thing and come back to a working machine.
My grandfather almost certainly would have known him. He worked in the Poughkeepsie lab in the 50's and into the mid 60s. He led the development team for the IBM 1620. I wish he was still around to ask.
Well, I'm just under two-thirds of the way to 91 and I can safely say that more 91 year olds are dying this year than have died in previous years (on average). I think that this is a good thing because more people are living into that age range to do the dying.
Dementia is a concern, and there is an Erdos-like irony about the chap who invented a reliable reasonably fast memory system developing Alzheimer's.
The post above yours may have been commenting on the number of IT/Computer related deaths this year - I suppose that is inevitable given the explosive growth in computing technology that occurred in the 60s/70s.
Nostalgia is funny that way. D'you remember how crappy 1988 was? Of course not. Maybe, maybe you remember some good stuff, but anything lousy probably either gets forgotten or attributed to something else.
It's been a running joke for 2016 in particular though. I see it all over the place. Every time some musician or actor dies, people personify 2016 in particular as a murderer or such.
1988 was pretty good but 1991 was pretty crappy. 1988 saw the premiere of Star Trek TNG. Of course, I was in 5th grade, so my perspective was child-like. 1991 saw mass layoffs at multiple companies, such as GE. There was also the Gulf War and the recession.
1991 saw tens of millions of people gain a liberty they'd never experienced before, as their countries became independent from the USSR. Ask them and I don't think they'll agree that 1991 was "pretty crappy".