The article that changed your mind really shouldn't have. It's mostly full of hyperbole. Like this:
"PGP does a mediocre job of signing things, a relatively poor job of encrypting them with passwords, and a pretty bad job of encrypting them with public keys. PGP is not an especially good way to securely transfer a file. It’s a clunky way to sign packages. It’s not great at protecting backups. It’s a downright dangerous way to converse in secure messages."
Literally none of this is true - the author is presenting their particular opinions as general fact. I use AES through PGP, knowing that even future quantum computers can't break it.
I wish they'd cut out all the 90's references and pointless exaggerations, and stuck to facts. Then again, the facts-only version of this article probably wouldn't make a strong case against PGP.
(Also, one of the links in the article, with the dodgy-and-harmful link text "Full disk encryption isn’t great", includes advice to use PGP in it. Maybe the author should have read the references they were citing.)