Dev & Code 10 h ago0Add to bookmarks

An opinion piece published this week reignites an old debate: is pure Debian still worth it compared to its derivatives? A dissection of a critique that hits a nerve.
Let's take a concrete case. You install Debian stable on a server in 2026. You get a sober system, renowned for its stability, with packages... let's say mature. This is exactly what gives Debian its reputation, and it's exactly what the post relayed by Notebookcheck attacks head-on: « vanilla Debian is mid ».
The « hot take » is based on an old observation but rarely expressed so bluntly: in its out-of-the-box state, Debian offers a conservative compromise - old packages, absence of pre-installed modern tools, raw user experience - that most users end up correcting by installing Ubuntu, Mint, Pop!_OS, or by adding third-party repositories (Flatpak, Nix, Backports).
In other words: almost no one actually uses pure Debian. The Debian community spends its time defending a base that most people prefer to consume distributed by a third party that has done the integration work.
The debate is not « is Debian bad » but « does the vanilla / derived distinction still make sense in 2026? ». With Flatpak, Snap, Nix, AppImage, distrobox and containers, the historical role of the distribution is eroding. The base matters less; the application layers matter more. Debian may be « mid » on the desktop because the desktop itself has fragmented.
Don't throw Debian on a server - it's still a defensible choice and often the best one. On a 2026 desktop, consider Fedora, Ubuntu LTS or an immutable (Bluefin, Aeon) if you want « modern » without effort. And if you insist on pure Debian on the desktop, own it: it's a posture choice, not an ergonomics choice.
Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.