Hey Rich, thanks for the reply, and pointing me to the mirror of the wiki that really helps me a lot. Also thanks for pointing out the book in pdf format, already made corrections to my machine thanks to info in the book (made a vm with the HD connected to ide as claimed to be the best solution for ESX in some forum posts, but the book stated that is should use paravirtualized scsi as thats is the supported solution) This small change made the vm boot even faster so i am a very happy camper.
About the minimal specs, it aint that big of a issue because this must by far be the smallest distro anyway. It's just that the numbers on the website seem to be from a ancient version. It's like Microsoft stating that they have a Windows version that can run on 256kb of memory, which is no lie in 1985 they had Windows 1.0 that did exactly that.
Already started digging in making your own extentsions so even if the extension i need does not exist yet i guess i could make it myself. I will retrace my steps on the Debian machine first to give a complete answer here first. Because if it already exists no need to reinvent the wheel.
Still the way this OS behaves is fundamently different then other linux variants. The concept that it creates an running environment from essentially merging the content of several archive files is very smart. However when i look at what most people are trying to do with this OS is making a machine that is not completly stateless which is the opposite of what this OS is very good at.