I do, but Linux should be a first-class platform alongside Windows.
Containers aren't too bad for storage from a developer's perspective. I'm talking about the dependency versioning bullshit of flatpak and snap specifically for end users. I don't know if AppImage technically counts as a container, but the whole point of it is to ship libraries the end user doesn't have, which implies a fundamental flaw in the hierarchical dependency tree or distribution model - the end user should already have everything they need to run software.
Ok buddy, got it. You bent me over. I think the implication in the commenter's anecdote was a relationship that is currently monogamous, and a break from that format is usually going to happen anyways (with or without mutual agreement).
Calling people out on friendly advice isn't very neighborly. Most relationships aren't built for monogamy.
Don't worry about it. You'll cheat on each other later so it's better to get used to it.
When you bring threads into it, these exotic features make more sense. I have been doing single-threaded stuff for the most part.