Fine, I apologise for reading your post wrong.
Yes, FAT 32 is ancient, but apparently Windows XP still used it, and NTFS isn't that better. Ext3, Ext4, and ReiserFS all beat NTFS in benchmark tests.
As for your "BULLSHIT"...erm, no it isn't. I really did spend ages searching for decent Windows software on the internet, then I had to download it, extract it, install it by mindlessly clicking "Next", "I accept", etc. Then sometimes I had to restart!!!
With Linux, I fire up my package manager, do a search of the packages (already indexed) and click to install. Linux then downloads, extracts, and does the necessary configuration for you. No program requires a restart either, which I think is pretty nifty. The package manager has been heralded as one of Linux's better points for a reason y'know.
Yes, FAT 32 is ancient, but apparently Windows XP still used it, and NTFS isn't that better. Ext3, Ext4, and ReiserFS all beat NTFS in benchmark tests.
As for your "BULLSHIT"...erm, no it isn't. I really did spend ages searching for decent Windows software on the internet, then I had to download it, extract it, install it by mindlessly clicking "Next", "I accept", etc. Then sometimes I had to restart!!!
With Linux, I fire up my package manager, do a search of the packages (already indexed) and click to install. Linux then downloads, extracts, and does the necessary configuration for you. No program requires a restart either, which I think is pretty nifty. The package manager has been heralded as one of Linux's better points for a reason y'know.