Replaced the old Crucial MX300 750GB SSD with Samsung 870 EVO 4TB SSD on my "modern" system (it's over 11 years old now) and installed Linux Mint as my daily driver. I switched to Linux a year ago and chose Kubuntu after some testing around back then, I liked KDE more than GNOME.
But now that Win10 support is getting dropped I need to replace it with something on my mothers laptop. It does support Win11 but I ain't touching that, I'm done with modern Windows as daily driver. I just don't trust Win11 or Microsoft in general anymore, so Linux it is.
While I've gotten fairly comfortable with Linux during the past year I'm still pretty new to it, so I decided to use the same distro on my own system and on my mothers laptop to make things easier for me if/when I need to act as phone support. I could have picked Kubuntu again but I had some issues with it and also the current long support release of Linux Mint is good for two years more than Kubuntu, so I went with Mint.
So far so good. Honestly I'm positively surprised all in all, my only gripes with it are just visual. Still not the biggest fan of how it looks, the start menu isn't entirely to my liking and the system settings pages make me feel like I'm using android on my desktop which isn't great but I can live with such minor issues.
Especially since everything else seems to work just fine. Even found a good text editor called Geany that lets you turn off remembering cursor position after closing files. That annoyed me to no end on Kubuntu with Kate, text files opened constantly all over the place. Doesn't seem like there's a text editor that is on par with Notepad++ unfortunately. Oh well, good enough.
Grub boot menu is also nice, letting me boot to Win7 from there. This stupid cheapo motherboard doesn't have shortcut key for boot override, you need to go through BIOS for that.