Updates in Linux are far more tolerable. There’s really no reason to delay Debian stable, imo, unless you absolutely can’t risk some downtime.
Server rats excepted, it’s just a process that goes in the background and at most, you have to reboot the kernel.
There’s no staring at the Blue Screen of Boredom while windows update holds your machine hostage.
I work at a medium size company with hundreds of Linux servers and none of them get updated. Because it’s more important that they keep running as they are than to have the latest updates. I bet this is very common for most companies.
There is nothing more important than security patches on a system.
I used to work at an FMI, which’s motto was “keep things stable”. Even the ciso department bought that crap. Until we hired a white hat hacker. The only thing given was the name of the company. He managed to get into the building, access an employee’s workstation and install a root kit on one of the most important financial message tracking systems (you know, the one that instructs other systems to transfer money), using a security bug, which would have been patched if they kept a regular (security) update cycle. After shit hit the fan, many people were fired and an update cycle was introduced.
No system is important enough to not patch. And if you believe it is, you’re wrong.
Not at all.
But Debian has security updates and you can set up unattended upgrades.
Meirl