You can go as light or deep into Linux as you like.
If all you do is surf the net, there's no real reason to run Windows unless you have hardware that isn't fully supported (2 in 1 laptop with Wacom pen,as an example.)
I switched from Windows to Arch Linux and I'd recommend that move only if you are familiar with command line and Powershell in Windows.
Arch Linux is built from ground up and has the latest packages available. It's a rolling release just like Windows 10 is. However, you have to read and understand the Arch Wiki to install it.
Otherwise, you can go with some flavor of Debian (Ubuntu, Linux Mint or Pop! OS) or Arch variant (Manjaro). These are all OSes with a GUI interface, although you will need to learn command line to do things more efficiently at times.
You can go as light or deep into Linux as you like.
If all you do is surf the net, there's no real reason to run Windows unless you have hardware that isn't fully supported (2 in 1 laptop with Wacom pen,as an example.)
I switched from Windows to Arch Linux and I'd recommend that move only if you are familiar with command line and Powershell in Windows.
Arch Linux is built from ground up and has the latest packages available. It's a rolling release just like Windows 10 is. However, you have to read and understand the Arch Wiki to install it.
Otherwise, you can go with some flavor of Debian (Ubuntu, Linux Mint or Pop! OS) or Arch variant (Manjaro). These are all OSes with a GUI interface, although you will need to learn command line to do things more efficiently at times.