
"If you're uncertain as to what a rolling release is, here's the gist: A rolling release is an approach to software development where updates are delivered continuously, in small, frequent increments, rather than in large, scheduled version releases. The idea behind this is that an operating system is always up to date, and major upgrades aren't necessary. Users always have the latest software, bug fixes, and patches as soon as they are ready."
"If I had to stake a claim on what has been one of the most beautiful Linux distributions on the market, Rhino Linux would easily be near the top. Rhino Linux uses the Xfce desktop and crafts it into something special. Xfce is one of the faster Linux desktop environments, and it also happens to be one of the most flexible."
Both Rhino Linux and EndeavorOS follow a rolling-release model that delivers continuous, small updates so systems remain current without major version upgrades. Rhino Linux is based on Ubuntu and offers a customized Xfce desktop focused on speed, flexibility, and visual polish. Rhino Linux uses Rhino PKG, a custom, unified meta-package manager that acts as a wrapper. EndeavorOS is based on Arch Linux and reflects the common rolling-release approach found in many Arch-based distributions. Rolling releases provide the latest software, bug fixes, and patches as soon as they are ready, reducing upgrade overhead.
Read at ZDNET
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]