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I'd say good move, I used to install Ubuntu on computers for people who were sick of Windows, but weren't overly technically minded. I've stopped doing that now because they tend to come back to me with random issues, like the Linux partition being corrupted randomly.
So Now I just install Debian, make sure all the drivers are setup/configured, and let them have at it. It works forever, and well.
Debian Jessie is awesome and I use it on my desktop and servers. When I feel like playing with newer things, I boot into Arch Linux and use it. But Debian for the most part just works.
Not been playing with it for long but Manjaro seems pretty good.
Consider, if have vm capability trying a few DMs.
1. They use patched versions of most libraries which completely destroys the open-source nature of the system
2. They are moving to Mir, which is a million times worse than it sounds.
3. They're a commercial company who don't care about their consumers. See nr. 1 and 2
*wipes sweat*
Apologies for biting, but patching packages is necessary (for integration and stabilisation), both distros do it.
EDIT: If you knew about the hell it is to install Unity in non-Ubuntu systems you'd get my point. See "Unity-for-Arch"