+1
Very true.
I think this all has to do with misconceptions and stereotypes. Before, Linux was the arcane thing, and if you managed to use it in any way, you could boast about being a computer god among the other normies that hadn't even tried. Now that Linux is mainstream, the BSD family has taken its place in the collective imagination of the normies who use computers for common things.
Before, there were SLS, Slack and RH. My personal fav then was Slack distribution on several 3.5” 1.4 MB diskettes downloaded from the fastest FTP Internet host, at the time, called ftp.sunet.se, at the blazing speed of 28.8+ kbps, over dial-up connection. After that, all I had to do was to boot, offload Linux kernel into my i386 with128MB of RAM, slip stream correct VGA and CD ROM drivers into the kernel, then re “make” the kernel, write onto new boot diskette, and then reboot back with VGA and CD ROM support. 30 years ago, Linux installation process required a full day of continuous tweaking of scripts and kernel parameters to make things work. Those days, installing Linux server was an interesting and involved project.
Today, Operating Systems self-install with help of few keyboard strokes or mouse clicks, so there’s very little to talk about that process. Nowadays, post-install doesn’t require any tweaking either, outside of basic configuration, as per well written instructions, in any OS, unless one needs to customize or develop things. I’m not a coder or software developer, so I don’t get into those discussions. But, I make things work for me. Thus, my FreeBSD, Kali, Darwin/MacO$ with Open Core and brew, plus NT/MSO$ with WSL are working as intended, including Open Source software that I utilize with Apples and Windows, and virtualizations in all of them.
In my view, selecting the best Operating System with supporting applications depends on user’s requirements, knowledge of their computer hardware's, capabilities, compatibility, and willingness to read and learn when required ;-)