1. Nothing is googleable. People have to google how to do things like adjust the layout of external monitors, and it's significantly harder to do that on linux.
2. There are a lot of different ways to install applications, and different options are available depending on which distro or application you're targeting
2. Most distros have an App Store that’s easy to find these days. Works great for non-cli tools
It's like 900x easier to install random software you find about online on a Mac (there's zip containing the .app directory, done), and about 10x easier to install random software on Windows (they give you a .exe you double click, click next a few times, done). Versus Linux where you look at a list of different file types, consider the differences between a .deb, .rpm, figure out if it should come from Flathub, deal with enabling unverified Flathub packages, possibly disable a Flathub package from your distro that sucks and overrides the maintainer's package, etc. See things like https://www.reddit.com/r/pcmasterrace/comments/1htu87i/it_to...
I doubt much people are interested in googling apps, finding exe and clicking 5 or 6 times a "next" button in 2025.
Having set one parent up on Mint, I can say categorically that it is still a bit of a config nightmare.