Endolith,
Ubuntu is based on Debian. Debian focus on getting a distro to what they 
consider "finished" before release. Unfortunately, without the discipline a 
release schedule provides, debian has proven releases may slip to three or more 
years apart.

With Debian stable, most of the time, you would find yourself one major
release behind flagship desktop programs such as Openoffice or Firefox.
Sometimes two releases behind. With Ubuntu, the release schedule gives
you most of the benefits of Debian, with a far more rapid release
schedule. So yes, we are paying a penalty for the release schedule, but
it is up to the individual user to choose  what is right for them. You
don't have to update to every Ubuntu release.

To manage this, you could:
1) Use Debian stable. Very long release schedule, but well-tested prior to 
release.
2) Stick to long term release versions of Ubuntu. These tend to be released 
faster than Debian stable, but also tend to be better tested and more 
thoroughly bug-fixed than intermediate releases, and you have fewer upgrades to 
cause potential problems.

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