I am actually not sure. I know raspbian has modifications in it that take care of board specific issues in it, such as high power consumption/heat from some issue related to USB PD and/or power states. I am not too familiar with the inner workings of distros and how hardware-specific fixes are propagated, but I like the idea of sticking with officially supported OS/hardware combos for "set and forget" boxes.
Wireguard was too alluring to not try though, and now I really like it. I would like to move away from my homemade pull, build, and install scripts, but not for any good/justified reason. I suppose I just like the idea of someone being responsible for a software stack that I rely on.
Interesting, can you cure my ignorance on why they don't claim to include 5.5.13 kernel in the main download page? I'm not super familiar with how distros are packaged up for consumers
Is the main download page the rough equivalent to `master`, and your link is like the feature branch for merging the latest kernel version into the distro?
Wireguard was too alluring to not try though, and now I really like it. I would like to move away from my homemade pull, build, and install scripts, but not for any good/justified reason. I suppose I just like the idea of someone being responsible for a software stack that I rely on.