Edubuntu is a special version of Ubuntu, designed for use in classroom and schools. It is also useful for children that are homeschooled.
problem of edunbuntu
Edubuntu offers free education software for school, homes, and communities. They want to make learning and knowledge available to everyone for free so they have started the Ubuntu project.
There is: Windows Ubuntu Kubuntu Edubuntu Xubuntu Applemac ----
Edubuntu. an distro of linux, made especially for education.
Um, they have a product related wiki in SourceForge; but my research leads me to believe you would need to re-install the Italc software; please refer too:http://italc.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php?title=Troubleshooting
Ubuntu, Kubntu, and the Ubuntu Education Edition (formerly Edubuntu) are the only ones that have an established system to provide free CDs. Fedora has a volunteer program to ship CDs, but few orders are accepted (mostly people in rural or impoverished areas).
Most Linux distributions can handle most of those tasks just fine. The one major hurdle would be inter-language support. Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, and OpenSUSE all have excellent translations in a wide variety of languages. They include or make it easy to install all of the multimedia codecs, compilers and IDEs, and have a large selection of educational Linux programs. Ubuntu even has a variant designed especially for education, know as Ubuntu Education Edition (formerly Edubuntu).
There are two main variants; the desktop and server editions. There are also other projects that use the Ubuntu base to provide other features or services:Ubuntu Education Edition - Formerly known as Edubuntu, is targeted at schools and children.Kubuntu - Uses KDE instead of GNOME as its desktop environment.Xubuntu - Uses Xfce instead of GNOME as its desktop environment.Gobuntu - Removes all proprietary software and firmware from the distribution.
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That depends on what you are looking for. If you want an OS that is fabulous for multimedia editing, But you are willing to pay a tad more, Mac is the way to go. If you are looking for a professional or gaming environment, I would say Windows. Then there's Linux. I have only spent much time researching the line of Ubuntu and Linux Mint. All of them have more personalisation options, minimal expenses(you do need a CD, DVD, or Flash Drive to install it), and run faster to some degree or another than either of the others. Also, with both, you can choose a distribution that fits your needs. Ubuntu has official distributions with Gnome(basic) KDE(heavyweight; Kubuntu), XFCE(lightweight; Xubuntu), LXDE(superlight; Lubuntu) Linux Mint also has the same releases, but some have switched over to Debian Testing(continuous updates rather than new releases). Other distributions I have looked at are Edubuntu, Ubuntu netbook edition, and UbuntuStudio. Linux Mint is based for people who want a desktop more like a Windows or a Mac, more button-pushing and less terminal-typing. It really depends on the speed of the computer, too. If your computer only has 512 MB RAM, It will not be able to run one of the bigger OS's out there, like Kubuntu, Windows 7 Ultimate, or Mac OS X Lion. I would choose something like Lubuntu, so it doesn't lag without running anything but the OS. I had an HP desktop that could hardly run Windows XP, and now it runs Linux Mint 11 with no trace of ever lagging.