In short, my question is “Is there a way to prevent a non-malicious but unknowledgable and clumsy user to ruin their own home directory?”
Say my grandma opens a file browser looking for a picture, finds those dot files or those mysteriously-named directories distracting, sets her mind to deleting them. And assume she somehow finds a way to do so. While I understand that dot files or mysteriously-named directories of a non-privileged user are of no ultimate importance, it is a maintenance nightmare.
Plus, it’s not only mysterious files that are prone to be targetted. She might well delete by accident the picture she was looking for.
Two kinds of solutions that come to mind are: -Restrict file permissions in an adequate way -Implement an easily operable, fool-proof, back-in-time scheme
Is there a mainstream, well-supported distro of GNU/Linux that has figured this use-case out?
I figure it might come in handy when Window 10 is no longer supported and the reports of hacks keep coming in.
Believe me I tried that many times, with many people. At some point one just can’t adopt neither Linux nor windows, or macOS.
If you absolutely want a computer, because of special needs or a specific use case, you may find inspiration anyway from some half baked attempts of manufacturers to build an senior friendly OS and hardware. Overpriced and designed by people not knowing what they were doing, at least it was like they a decade ago.
I’ve been there too, the best success I had was :
… Omg I started typing and now I remember how difficult it was technically and how hard it was to help people trying to be a decent human being every single time. Everything will break in a way neither you nor the user could imagine or understand how it happened clearly.
Buy an iPad.