> And Linux won't arbitrarily irrevocably brick your computer because of an automatic update.
To the average user, it absolutely will. Unless they happen to run on particularly well-supported hardware, the days of console tinkering aren't gone, even on major distros.
What's fixable to the average Linux user and what's fixable to the average person (whose job is not to run Linux) are two very, very different things.
If you run a modern distro with a modern filesystem, you can at the very least have automatic snapshots that actually work, and you can restore to a previous state if an update breaks things. The same cannot be said for Windows.
I have booted from snapshots on Ubuntu with ZFS plenty of times and it has worked fine. I've also used Snapper with btrfs and restored from backup and it's worked fine. I've also booted from snapshots in NixOS and it has worked fine. I actually cannot think of a time where any of those examples didn't work fine.
To the average user, it absolutely will. Unless they happen to run on particularly well-supported hardware, the days of console tinkering aren't gone, even on major distros.
What's fixable to the average Linux user and what's fixable to the average person (whose job is not to run Linux) are two very, very different things.