@dimkr :-
Reading your musings at Github has kinda left me "hanging in the wind" a bit!
Whilst I agree with some of your proposed - and already implemented - ideas, it seems to me that the general idea is for the future of Puppy to be based around Debian, yes? Not that this is a bad thing in itself, but this insistence on maintaining maximum compatibility with the parent distro inevitably means returning to "apt-get" and the use of Synaptic for everything.....which were two of the major reasons for my moving to Puppy in the first place. To get AWAY from them..!
I believe that it's also going to mean that many of the uniquely Puppy methods of implementing software will cease to work, since Puppy will henceforth be set-up to function exactly - and ONLY - like a 'mini-Debian' instead. Is this also going to mean that installing Debian-specific packages will be the ONLY available route going forward?
(I accept that apt is a mature, and well-established, highly thought-of package-management system, but I never liked Synaptic when I first moved to Linux more than a decade ago. I still don't like it. I don't think anything will change my mind about that.)
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I still think this route is eventually going to turn Puppy into simply a 'clone' of every other distro out there. May I ask you a question? Is it your personal view that the RedHat "way of doing things", where everybody standardises on one, and ONLY one method of implementing functionality - a la Windows! - is the best long-term route for Linux (and by extension, Puppy itself) to take? (I can't help feeling that, this being the case, it's also going to make the "bad actor's" job much easier, since one single exploit will automatically affect every distro extant, in one fell swoop).
Just curious, really, since you have more of a background in this stuff than pretty well all the rest of us put together...and you seem to understand the nuances & implications of NOT changing better than anyone.
Mike. 