I don't think I have any adobe software (apart from Reader)
Ok - 16.04 it is - for my private little trial run anyway.
I have 20 GB per month, of which I usually use anything between 16 and 19 for other things, like downloading audiobooks and so on. I can afford to download Linux versions maybe once or twice a month, maybe even 3 times - providing Microsoft don't go and throw another 5 GB update at me at the same time (that's why they've cost me so much, btw - the sheer size of the 'updates', which often fail to download properly and then start all over again the next time I start my machine).
Like John, I want to be free of being force fed updates against my will. I want to be in control of my machine, rather than at the mercy of its operating system, so Linux looks like the only real option, even if I do go and get a much bigger machine one day. By that time I probably won't want to surrender my new freedom.
I'm not entirely sure I know how to make the boot stick. Straf suggested it earlier. I'll go back up the thread and have a look. Something about ISO (presumably not isometric perspective).
I'll wait before I start downloading, in case I have to use a particular version to be able to do this boot stick. I don't want to spend the evening downloading the wrong version in haste.
And, thanks ChickPea - it IS terrifying if all your life you've only ever used Windows from the moment you swapped an Atari for your very first home PC
@Straf - how do I do this boot stick thing?
EDIT: ninjad twice again!
@Falconius - as long as I can use the relatively tiny selection of graphics apps I currently use in Windows, but in Linux instead, I'm so sick of the way things are with Win 10 and my machine that I'm prepared to put up with the lack of apps. Windows is all so big and glitzy, but do I really even look at most of it?
I use about 10 apps, and that's it.
Oh - btw. Can you use Scrivener with Linux?