Thanks Liliana, zimoun, Ryan and Vagrant for feedback! Ludovic Courtès writes: > Or if we do want to explain more, then perhaps we need a list of > features that would also include things like Docker/VM image generation, > declarative home environments, etc. But that’s broader topic. Yes, that makes sense. I'm not the best person to summarize it, but starting pointers if someone wants to take it further: * Dedication to free software goals and the GNU community * Shepherd init system written in Guile * Declarative stateless system configurations * Transactional upgrades and roll-backs * Reproducible build environments * Designed towards bootstrappable builds Maybe this fits better directly in the Introduction section of the manual? https://guix.gnu.org/manual/en/html_node/Introduction.html > PS: For the record, the phrase “advanced distribution of the GNU system” > was coined by RMS at a time where he insisted that this thing cannot > be called “the GNU system”. All this makes little sense, even less > so today, but if you’re curious you may enjoy Andreas’ entertaining > talk: https://10years.guix.gnu.org/video/ten-years-of-failures/ Ah, thanks, the wording of that paragraph is more understandable now! I can see how that wording came about, and also how it clarify compared to the GNU system. I think this knowledge was the missing piece I didn't have. As an introduction to what Guix is for someone without earlier understanding of GNU etc, I still believe that the word 'advanced' does not contribute though. /Simon