Ordinarily I don't reply to AC's, but let's unpack this...
I'm sure you do! But I'm also sure that it doesn't involve the official Cricut app, since they only have a Windows/Mac download on their website. You can probably use the browser-based version of Cricut, or perhaps you've gotten WINE to work with it, or maybe there's some sort of OpenCricut solution, and maybe there's even a bash script running around the Cricut forums that require little more than downloading and running the script to have every dependency met and have it 'just work' the way it does for Windows. I'm sure I could tailor my examples a bit better, but fundamentally, one cannot get a Cricut working on Linux purely by following the Cricut-provided documentation, without using the browser (i.e. dumb terminal mode).
Okay, maybe it's gotten better. It'd be nice if Disney+ worked with an out-of-the-box browser on Mint or Ubuntu the way it does with Edge or Safari. Maybe I should have used Peacock as my example, or maybe my point was that most streaming services work inconsistently on Linux due to the DRM components that are unfortunately necessary in order to use them. Personally, I prefer Mint/Ubuntu shipping without the Widevine components and prompting at first setup, but there have been multiple articles here, on Slashdot, over the years, regarding the back-and-forth compatibility drama with various streaming services; I'm sorry I picked another imperfect example because D+, apparently, works at least some of the time.
Never said selling on Etsy was a problem; it was just a means to an end to describe a common scenario where a non-technical person might have a need for something more than a browser and a word processor.
use Google Drive (and don't use Chrome),
Never said it wasn't possible, I went out of my way to indicate that drive syncing *is* possible on Linux (Mint, specifically), and that it *usually* works, but Google and Microsoft both mess around with the underlying protocols that sometimes cause those services to break. I put the blame SQUARELY on Google and Microsoft for this, but it's still something that isn't a problem on Windows.
Never said it couldn't...I literally pointed out it's possible to do so on a browser, and that Clementine works, but it'd require a whole process to import an existing library that involved python scripts, rather than an "import library from iTunes" button, for the users that still leverage that workflow (and I know *plenty* who do).
And, cue the broken record, I *said* that scanning works. I said that a specific function that is present on Canon/Epson/Visioneer drivers, which is a huge timesaver, isn't present on most iterations of Linux-based scanning software.
and have had no issue switching to Linux.
I'm sure you haven't. I'm not saying it can't be done. My *entire* point was that one will either run into higher barriers than Windows or OSX require, or the onramp is made easier because nearly all of the data and actual software has gotten externalized onto cloud-based solutions. Each user is going to have a different amount of tolerance for those barriers, but the draw to Windows isn't Windows itself, it's the laundry list of applications that Windows runs, and Linux doesn't. To switch is to have enough of a principled stance that one is willing to deal with data conversions and migrations, subscriptions and externalities, and workflow shifts in order to get back to the starting point...and that Linux's value proposition, on a desktop, unfortunately doesn't always even out.