With respect, I'd strongly prefer a
binary rolling release, following Slackware -current. As mentioned in my previous response here, I will check whether Slackel meets that need.
The rationale, or use case for
Salix Rolling, is for advanced users wanting to keep up with the latest software releases, and willing to make the tradeoff with the reduced stability of Slackware -current. PatV, AlienBob and RWorkman already take the time and effort to make -current available in binary form.
So why don't I just slink away and use straight Slackware -current? I very well may do that on a dedicated PC. However, I also strongly prefer the dependency resolution offered by Salix, among other features which you guys handle so well.
The other part of this use case for
Salix Rolling is being able to dedicate older PCs for this, hardware which lacks the resources to build all packages from source. Again, for anyone wanting to do that, something like Gentoo might yield higher benefits for the same amount of effort.
There is ongoing discussion on this topic on a Google Plus thread; unfortunately it's switched to French, and the technical nature of the topic makes Google Translate ineffective:
https://plus.google.com/u/0/11780191755 ... 7TnkQSwdTj
Thanks for your time and patience in discussing this here.
fredg wrote:thenktor wrote:jayseye wrote:Does anyone else see that as a missed opportunity for a SalixOS Rolling Release?
No

Salix team members prefer stable systems and also there is always the possibility to upgrade some specific software to unstable versions using SLKBUILDS.
All is said. We all agree with that.
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