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<blockquote data-quote="lokamoka820" data-source="post: 1105761" data-attributes="member: 108773"><p>Ubuntu have an LTS release and regular release, the LTS gets updates every 2 years and the regular every 6 months like fedora. Debian have 3 branches: stable, testing and Sid, so you can get updates depending on the branch you choose, and there is <a href="https://sparkylinux.org/" target="_blank">SparkyLinux </a>which is based on Debian and have 2 editions: stable and semi-rolling, the semi-rolling is based on Debian testing but what is interesting about it that it gets stable updates daily, and complete tested snapshot update every 3 months, which will make it fresh and more stable than Debian testing itself.</p><p></p><p>And you maybe know this about kernels, there are LTS and normal versions too. LTS kernels are more stable than normal, I think you will need to use a normal release kernel if you have a new machine that LTS kernel doesn't work on it, in Manjaro settings manager it will show you detailed information about kernels available and the recommended one.</p><p>[ATTACH]285912[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="lokamoka820, post: 1105761, member: 108773"] Ubuntu have an LTS release and regular release, the LTS gets updates every 2 years and the regular every 6 months like fedora. Debian have 3 branches: stable, testing and Sid, so you can get updates depending on the branch you choose, and there is [URL='https://sparkylinux.org/']SparkyLinux [/URL]which is based on Debian and have 2 editions: stable and semi-rolling, the semi-rolling is based on Debian testing but what is interesting about it that it gets stable updates daily, and complete tested snapshot update every 3 months, which will make it fresh and more stable than Debian testing itself. And you maybe know this about kernels, there are LTS and normal versions too. LTS kernels are more stable than normal, I think you will need to use a normal release kernel if you have a new machine that LTS kernel doesn't work on it, in Manjaro settings manager it will show you detailed information about kernels available and the recommended one. [ATTACH]285912[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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