Sturgeon being found to have misled parliament. Once this would have meant resignation but we are not in Kansas anymore.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-56451170
The committee split entirely on party lines, which suggests to me that the voting is more political than evidential. It may ever have been thus in these kinds of committee, but I guess in many cases if a PM (or FM) has an absolute majority in their parliament then they will have a majority in the committees. So were this to be Boris Johnson to be under the same scrutiny but with a Westminster committee then he'd probably be OK if there was a split absolutely along party lines.
Reminds me a bit of the impeachment of Trump - where the evidence seemed pretty irrelevant it was all decided on the political make-up of the House and the Senate.
So all in all - given the huge publicity of the inquiry a deeply unsatisfactory outcome as far as I'm concerned. Not on whether she did or did not mislead etc (hard for me to judge given that I've not seen all the evidence), but that the outcome looks to me to be one you could have anticipated before a word of evidence had been taken - SNP MSPs voting for Sturgeon, non-SNP MSPs voting against.
I think the other inquiry (or are the two more ongoing - I've lost track) may be more interesting as that is being considered in a manner independent of party political factionalism.