Waiting For Slackware 11
Up to now, i have been using Slackware-current, which is a normal slackware distribution which has been equipped with the latest packages in -current tree. Normally, every new packages will be placed in -current tree first and soon, it will be available on the next Slackware release. There are two reason for Pat to do this. First, it won't broke the stable system, as new packages tends to changes things by adding new features or removing old and deprecated APIs. This is anticipated by not putting the packages in -stable tree, which is intended for production system which need stability more than bleeding-edge packages. Pat will put it also in -stable tree if it is considered a security fix. The second reason is that it can be tested heavily with newer packages also, so most of the functionality should work for next release. After six months or so, it will be released as a new Slackware release (which should be Slackware 11.0 for the next release if there is no changes on the naming). I have seen the trend that Pat will release Slackware 11 soon. If you look on -current changelog, you will see that the bin packages has a new name,
a/bin-11.0-i486-1.tgz
My basic distro was 10.1 and then i tried to follow the -current tree as i like the bleeding-edge packages. There are advantage and also disadvantage of using -current tree. The advantage is that you will get the latest package with more function. One great example of this is KDE 3.5.x which is not being available on -stable tree but available in -current tree. Another advantage is that you don't need to upgrade when new release is available, since you have been using the same packages.
The disadvantage is some of the packages need more testing and configuration to make it stable and it takes efforts to do that. I like to compile my own kernel now and to tune it as good as possible, i have to try for several times until i got the ideal (ideal, not perfect, as there is no perfect configuration) configuration for my machine. Other disadvantage is that it will change some configuration on your system, so you MUST read the changelog first before you start upgrading your packages. It can broke your system if you are not aware of that.
If you are looking for supports, there is an official Slackware forum at LinuxQuestions. You can also join Indonesian Linux Forum where i became a moderator there. If you are new to Slackware, i recommend that you should read Slackbook first.
Happy Slacking from Slacker :D
