Ubuntu is built using a 6+ month old snapshot of unstable Debian packages. Ubuntu now defaults to the GNOME desktop. Debian defaults to the GNOME desktop (though like other distributions they have multiple options instead of GNOME).
With Ubuntu you get a release every 6 months, and a new LTS version every 2 years. With Debian you get an LTS release around every 2 years (but only "when ready/stable"), but you can also follow a rolling-release version (release+1, aka 'testing'), which still receives security updates and is treated with priority.
What's the value add for Ubuntu now? A firewall wrapper for iptables? AppArmor installed by default? Why do you choose Ubuntu over Debian?
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