Based on the way you describe your expectations of Windows, and that different versions and licence models needs to be listed independently, this also would mean that the same would need to apply for Linux, Mac, FreeBSD, etc.; this would explode the number of operating systems listed.
Let's take just the latest 2 major Windows versions, 10 and 11. You would minimally need :
- Windows 10 Home
- Windows 10 Pro
- Windows 10 Enterprise
- Windows 11 Home
- Windows 11 Pro
- Windows 11 Enterprise
Based on that you state a "distribution" is defined by different features, then this also means minor versions should also be used. Windows 11 23H2 has many features that say 21H2 didn't. This means that for Windows 11 alone you need to list 4 additional rows (due to the 4 minor versions) per licence model.
Obviously, if we're going to use that treatment, we need to apply it to Linux too. If we take Ubuntu, this has a major release twice a year, with an LTS every 2 years. So we would want (for example) 22.04 LTS, 22.10, 23.04, 23.10, 24.04 LTS and 24.10 listed. Do we also then also need things like 22.04.2 listed as well?
What about users that have a licence for Ubuntu Pro? Do we then need to list that separately again, for each version, like we are for Home and Pro on Windows? I assume so.
What about ARM Vs AMD64? From a feature side these are vastly different, so surely yes; that explodes the amount again.
Honestly, this sounds like a terrible UX for all involved.
Instead I would suggest that there is a separate question, explicitly for what type of operating systems you use, which can list Windows, Linux, Mac, FreeBSD, etc. Hopefully, if any of those are ticked, then further questions for version or distro could be prompted.
So if I ticked Windows, ChromeOS, and Linux, I could then select 11 and 10 for Windows, and (K)Ubuntu, Debian, and Arch for Linux; this would be 3 separate questions. ChromeOS could also have an option for actual ChromeOS and ChromeOS Flex.
If Stack Overflow chose, they could also have questions about architecture, such as AMD64, Intel86, ARM, RISC, etc.
This is, of course, too late now but for future surveys this seems like a better™ solution, and doesn't explode the options as proposed here.