I don't mind Fedora. It's perfectly usable.
And, to add thoughts I've said a number of times:
It doesn't matter that Linux on the desktop isn't huge. I don't care that it doesn't have the same market share that Microsoft or Apple have. I don't need other people to use Linux to feel better about myself and my choices. I use Linux because it Just Works® (for me).
When you stop and look at the numbers, that small market share is some 38m to 44m people (depending on whose numbers you use) happily using Linux. And, we can tell they're happily using Linux by how few/small the relative support sites are.
This site ranks #1 in Google for "Linux". If 44 *million* people had issues with their Linux systems... Well, our infrastructure surely couldn't handle that.
And, beyond the desktop? Ha! Pretty much the only computational market not dominated by Linux is the desktop market. We, and I do mean we, dominate pretty much every other market. As the article indicates, there's Linux in your light bulbs - if you have the fancy ones that are a part of a smart home.
A wild-arse-guess would be: I'd not be surprised to find Linux in billions of devices - counting things like mobile phones. So, when people say that Linux isn't a popular desktop OS, that's just a red herring. It doesn't matter that Linux isn't wildly popular on the desktop. My ego isn't that frail.