16 years ago I wrote about why I like Debian [0]. I recently re-read it with an eye towards seeing if what I wrote held up today. The main points I mentioned were the packaging system and the non-commercial community, and how Debian puts the users first. I wrote: I don't have to worry about the motives of Debian, they tend to include features that make for happy users and sysadmins first. I think this point rings even more true today after the recent Red Hat (IBM) debacles, first with CentOS and later the RHEL source code. The Debian packaging system is still (in my opinion) the best among the distros as far as usability, but feature-wise dnf and some of the other packaging systems have caught up to it at this point. My comment about Ubuntu was way off mark - in 2007 I liked Ubuntu as a decently up-to-date and stable Debian-based desktop distro, and for a few years after even a server distro. But I gave up on Ubuntu as it seemed to lose its way pretty frequently, and I don't regret that as I read about Ubuntu's move away from Debian packaging and towards snaps. My only current reservation about Debian is with the adoption of systemd, but for desktops I don't think this matters much. For servers I still prefer systemd-less operating systems - Devuan or the various BSDs are the path of least resistance here, but it's also pretty easy to switch init systems on Debian during the install process [1], so this isn't really an objection anymore. [0]: gopher://gopher.unixlore.net/0/articles/historical-blog-posts/20071004-comments-on-why-im-staying-with-debian.txt [1]: https://wiki.debian.org/Init#Changing_the_init_system_-_at_installation_time