I've almost finished my Bookworm build and I wanted to post this to say thank you to all those behind the DebianDogs. I don't look in on the forum often enough to be clear about who contributes what. It looks like Fredx181 is the lead. Thank you Fredx181! But if you also contribute to the OS, my thanks are to you as well.
My Linux experience started with Puppy. I had an old, underpowered PC that I wanted to put an OS on. Using Puppy showed me that I wanted to continue exploring Linux and to use Windows less. But I moved away from Puppy because of the difficulty in adding some of the packages I wanted. (It may be easier on Puppy now, I don't know). With DebianDog, just use Synaptic.
The use case for me, is that I'm a single user and like to tinker with my system. Running the system as root, loading everything into RAM and rebooting everything exactly as it was before I started tinkering, is exactly what I want. Tried LMDE (Linux Mint Debian Edition) and just opening directories wasn't straightforward as a normal (non-root) user, nevermind using the terminal.
I understand that one of the original philosophies behind Puppy was to keep the OS small and light for use on older hardware. Which is how I discovered it. With everything I've added to my Bookworm build it's now 2GB plus. With PCs these days, it could be twice as large and not a problem. The makelive script is a great idea. It's fantastic to be able to custom build from a small base and to be able to build in the latest packages, whenever you build it. Debian doesn't have the very-latest-just-last-week packages, but I only need basic stuff with hopefully most of the bugs filtered out. Debian works for me.
There is a Windows 10 on my PC, but haven't used it in a few years. It only gets booted accidentally these days. DebianDog is my main system. Love the Linux FOSS philosophy. Sadly way above my skillset to be able to contribute anything useful myself. I've learned so much in customising DebianDog for my needs though. Never thought I would write a script, but have put together about a dozen in bash to do various things.
The frugal boot works very well and as a live USB, my main system is also my emergency rescue system.
Hope you continue with this project. You're all doing great work. I imagine it must take a lot of time and effort. And if your experience is anything like mine, though at a higher level, frustration too. It's appreciated.
A big thumbs up!