I finally tried Linux on my laptop again, because my win7 install has picked up a lot of cruft and I'm not yet rdy/willing to reinstall everything. First I tried mint, and it wouldn't run. I got a mouse pointer but it hung up. Trying "safe mode" didn't get me any farther. So I tried Ubuntu, and it worked ok, but on reboot several subsystems didn't reset properly. Sound and graphics were borked, so was the mouse. It took 3 reboots before the laptop was back to "normal" running win7, so something in one or more of the Linux drivers were not only not quite compatible, but which put the hardware into a state that could be out of spec or damaging in some way.
So, I pretty much gave up on Linux on my laptop, at least for now. Ubuntu worked ok but the UI was working too hard to be "not Microsoft", so there were some usability issues with menus being hidden and no single place to go see a list of all installed software (it was all scattered into various categories, except some apps were in more than one category and some apps didn't fit any categories so there was no way to launch them from the GUI, had to use command line), plus the somewhat scary hardware issue, led me to set it aside.
Maybe I'll try another simpler distribution, but some are too simple. I was going to try slackware since that was the first real distro I ever was comfortable with about 20 years ago, but they still need floppies for the installation boot image, and my laptop has no FDD and I don't have a functioning USB FDD. So no slackware...
I've pretty much settled in win7, except for that MS home server box which I finally upgraded and got running again. I love the functionality of that thing. Super useful, and trivial to set up and maintain, and reasonably fast now that its running on hardware with native SATA and gigabit Ethernet on the mobo.