For me, i'm genuinely to dumb for anything else
Seriously though, I was used to running disk less (W2K) since very early 2000, since the ntldr from w2k3 was not crippled and i could pxe-boot that.. Coupled with sandboxie (for which i have a now worthless unlimited lifetime licence) that served as my easy application virtualization, I couldn't possibly be more happy long into 2015.
Drivers started to become an issue, and corresponding hardware upgrades.
The best tip in linux I ever had was this: "almost all distro's are just a skinned copy of some upstream distro. A decent upstream distro has a specific purpose (or is pointless). Figure out what you want, find matching distro."
Ok, so want tiny tiny tiny, and I quite literally asked: "gimme io.sys and command.com".
The website and the book into the core, were thusly a joy to read, as they managed to very quickly convey that tinycore would work exactly the way i'd like it: the so called "cloud os".
It's somewhat sad, that in reality, it seems there is not much help/support for the main purpose, and more support (seemingly) for more 'traditional' setups.
I've been a daily driver, with very minor cheating using vnc+vps as remote desktop. Clocked 800 days uptime with tc10.1 on a 2.8 single core celeron (from early 2000) with 512M shared. (hint, httpmounting stuff gives you access as if it was on your local (ram-)drive, but cost just some KB for fuse and httpmount tool, and as plenty of research has shown in the past years, things like mozilla have shown that download fresh is FASTER than browser cache...)
I've been working diligently to achieve the dream: be able to travel abroad, buy the cheapest possible usb-stick (or even more ideally just burn onto optical), buy the utmost cheapest second hand crap arse laptop, boot it, and pass an http-url on the command-line, to wind up on 'my' system (with 'my' data).
What will keep me using tinycore? To continue to be an independent distro, that supports 32bit, is TINY, and continues to hold tru to the promises from basically the first chapter of 'into the core'.
I know friends tell me i want alpine, but their website simply doesn't immediately show the properties that i want.. In that regard, the author of into the core did an excellent job, they literally had me at chapter 1..
Also, keep up the good work all, and thanks for this distro, as you can see, I indeed am to dumb to do anything else and depend on tinycore because I can hardly turn back to w2k anno 2024 (sadly).
As for new ideas, me personally wouldn't mind a tiny extra cost: borrowing our customized version of openwrt's super small signify, and have corresponding signed repository. It's just to simple to setup some free wifi access point, and send tinycore requests a bad extension + matching md5...
What would make me leave?
The very moment that GoBo and TinyCore get a bastard child, I'm immediately switching (while at it, ditch lua and PLEASE glue it together with qjs instead, the latest qjs can be statically compiled with muslc to less than 700K !! and i'd promise/guarantee i'd be a main contributor) and i couldn't be more happy to say bye bye to the unix equivalent of dll hell and the insane unix folder-structure, most of wich actually originates with the old farts back when literally running out of their 3MiB diskspace (i do know my history, lol)..