I don't think I understand any of your objections.
When was Windows ever immutable in the sense of current immutable Linux distros? I wasn't able to find any reference to this ever being the case.
What do package managers and making the base as small as possible have to do with immutable distros? Package managers still exist, and the base is pretty much the same size as the non-immutable version of the same distro.
Why do immutable distros make more sense on modems with old flash memory?
How does being immutable harm the distros ability to evolve?
Either I'm not understanding your position at all, or you have a very different understanding of "immutable" than I do (after using Kinoite as my daily driver for a year).
When was Windows ever immutable in the sense of current immutable Linux distros? I wasn't able to find any reference to this ever being the case.
What do package managers and making the base as small as possible have to do with immutable distros? Package managers still exist, and the base is pretty much the same size as the non-immutable version of the same distro.
Why do immutable distros make more sense on modems with old flash memory?
How does being immutable harm the distros ability to evolve?
Either I'm not understanding your position at all, or you have a very different understanding of "immutable" than I do (after using Kinoite as my daily driver for a year).