For my type of user, the average writer and non-programmer, Windows and MacOS operating systems work just fine since most of the apps I use are web-based and used through a browser.
However, I intend to switch to a Linux-based operating system. I already run a version of Ubuntu via a virtual machine on my Macbook and soon, not far from today, I will switch to a PC with Linux installed bare metal.
Before I quit my job as a customer support specialist at a fintech, I'd usually leave the support team's office space and go to the product team's office space to work from there because I loved the technical conversations that go on there.
My office best friends, Anthony, a full-stack engineer, and David, a product designer, would go on for hours talking about servers, code refactoring, laptop specs, pull requests, Azure, infrastructure, design changes, etc. Yet the clueless and curious me would sit listening in excitement.
Those conversations made me look out for what more can I do with my computer.
I do not intend to be a software engineer, however, I think I will enjoy tinkering around some technicalities like a Linux-based operating system. For example, Ubuntu has a simple files manager app yet it still allows you to access your files by running commands through the terminal.
Linux gives you a GUI to use software yet it still allows the option to run the same software with commands through the terminal.
There's a plethora of Linux-based operating systems, AKA distributions, however, I've been able to filter my options down to ZorinOS for when I make the switch.