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.
Xubuntu and Ubuntu are two different versions of Ubuntu. (Ubuntu has GNOME.)
There are many types and brands of computer operating systems. Some of them include Windows, Apple OSX, Ubuntu, UNIX, Linux, and Android.
The different types of operating systems are 1) DOS 2)Windows 3)ubuntu 4)Linux 5)unix
Any type of computer will support Ubuntu as long as the computer has met the requirements such as memory. You must have at least 3gb's of storage.
Windows (Most popular for now) , Mac OS X (consumer use, and professional) , Linux, Ubuntu (more consumer friendly then linux)
Ubuntu generally creates a different partition on your hard drive, formatted with the EXT4 filesystem. Therefore, without special software, you cannot access your files on Ubuntu from Windows. However, you can access your Windows files from Ubuntu without any trouble. When Ubuntu is installed, you get to choose whether to boot into Ubuntu or Windows when the computer turns on. That means that you cannot be actively logged into both Windows and Ubuntu on the same computer. However, you can install Ubuntu on a virtual machine, making the computer run Ubuntu inside an emulator in Windows. This makes it possible to run Ubuntu while you are logged into Windows. I do not recommend it, though. Ubuntu users and Windows users are in different operating systems, so you cannot just switch between them like you can in Windows accounts.
Linux.
There are six different types of computers in the world such as the microprocessor. Another type of computer is the personal computers
The only similarity between Microsoft Windows (propriety) and Ubuntu (open-source) is that they are both operating systems. Apart from that, they are as different as chalk and cheese!
Ubuntu is best, but then I'm biased, as my computers all run Ubuntu!
yes, if ubuntu is on a different physical drive or on a different partition if you are stuck with one physical drive. No if it on the same partition as windows The soloution, create a new fresh partition just for windows and make it about , a minimum 40GB
Ubuntu is better in the management manner. visit here for more info. techinfozone.net