
What is Ubuntu?
Ubuntu is a complete desktop Linux operating
system, freely available with both community and
professional support. The Ubuntu community is
built on the ideas enshrined in the Ubuntu
Manifesto: that software should be available
free of charge, that software tools should be
usable by people in their local language and
despite any disabilities, and that people should
have the freedom to customize and alter their
software in whatever way they see fit.
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Ubuntu will always be free of charge,
and there is no extra fee for the “enterprise
edition”, we make our very best work
available to everyone on the same free terms.
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Ubuntu includes the
very best in translations and accessibility
infrastructure that the Free
Software community has to offer, to make Ubuntu
usable by as many people as possible.
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Ubuntu is shipped in stable and regular release
cycles;
a new release will be shipped every six months.
You can use the current stable release or the
current development release. A release will be
supported for 18 months.
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Ubuntu is entirely committed to the principles
of open source software development; we
encourage people to use open source software,
improve it and pass it on.
Ubuntu is suitable for both desktop and server
use. The current Ubuntu release supports Intel
x86 (IBM-compatible PC), AMD64 (Hammer) and
PowerPC (Apple iBook and Powerbook, G4 and G5)
architectures.
Ubuntu includes more than 1000 pieces of
software, starting with the Linux kernel version
2.6 and Gnome 2.8, and covering every standard
desktop application from word processing and
spreadsheet applications to internet access
applications, web server software, email
software, programming languages and tools and of
course several games. |