Sure, if pink is your choice then by all means!
I go the other way, gnome classic with as little bloat as possible to make everything snappy.
But I was actually thinking much wider in terms of customization, as Linux allows you to customize virtually everything; to fit your workflow.
People haven't really tried Linux until they've embraced the terminal, preferably a dropdown one (and possibly a terminal multiplexer), and all kinds of goodies to speed up their workflow. This is especially relevant for developers and sysadmins.
I've trained a bunch of developers, both fresh and "seniors", in using Linux, terminal, git, grep, etc., and those who dive into it really get super efficient, even though they all end up with their own "quirky" workflow. (I of course use a lot of GUI tools to, but the terminal is a large part of the workflow.)
It's fascinating to see how much faster and efficient people get when they get out of the typical "Visual Studio" or "Eclipse" way of doing things through heavy slow GUIs. I try to use whatever gives me the control I want and the information I want, so I can stay in "the zone" and not be distracted.
For sure, not to mention faster IO in general. What annoys me is the typing lag on Windows, I have to slow down to avoid a lot of typos. It even sometimes enters the characters in the wrong order if I do it fast enough.
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Luckily, Intel systems have generally worked well at launch with Linux. I know Bulldozer, Zen 1 and Zen 2 had some issues, but I haven't seen any on my Zen 3. Granted I didn't buy that at launch, but I haven't heard anything regarding Zen 3 and 4 like with the previous iterations at launch.