jayseye wrote:Package building? The way I see it mimosa, Slackware -current is already a rolling binary distro. The essence of what Slackel does, from what I've read, is adding dependencies, and fine-tuning GSlapt and a few custom Salix tools, as needed.
I agree with this. Slackel has it's own slackware current repos with dependencies, pull packages from salix as they run on current and has also its own package repos.
I have to add also that there are packages not included on slackware and they have to build from source, making new SLKBUILDS. e.g. libreoffice-3.6.2, latest openjdk-7u9, openjre-7u9 (they build from source and they are not alienbob binaries), kdenlive, kvirc and many more i can't mention here. Also a lot of testing need, so always slackel can be stable. there are packages that pull of salix repo packages. But after a while (months maybe) a lot of them have to rebuild or patched to run on slackware current. So more work is necessary.
This is a huge work, the users don't understand. Another huge work is to test and build the final iso's.
Slackel is a mix of slackware current tree and salix stable tree with latest kde and new versions of apps not included on slackware.
Without salix-tools (and great job of gapan, jrd, akuna, shador and all salix developers and packagers) slackel will be less usable for newbies.
Slackel is like a laboratory. If you want a stable distro then use Salix. If you like to test things and be as much as possible stable then use Slackel.
Slackel will always follow slackware current and latest kde desktop. When a stable version of slackware released a stable slackel will released also (slackel-kde-14.0 for example).
And after this the next version with slackware current and latest kde will follow. So the livedvd's of slackel-kde-4.9.2 (32 and 64 bit) are tested and will released the next one -two days.