That's the way Ubuntu runs it's distro's, for full reliability you stick to the LTS, for cutting edge you go with an intermediate release.
Personally I find hte LTS releases to after say two years get a bit long in the tooth but they do get the necessary security updates and by adding a few PPA's you can keep certain parts like the kernel fairly up to date.
Personally I find hte LTS releases to after say two years get a bit long in the tooth but they do get the necessary security updates and by adding a few PPA's you can keep certain parts like the kernel fairly up to date.
Comment