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Ubuntu Feisty Fawn

Ubuntu LogoThe latest version of Ubuntu Linux has now been released. Feisty Fawn can be downloaded from the Ubuntu Site. You can also download Edubuntu’s Feisty Fawn release. This version of Ubuntu is loaded up with open source educational software and has a clean looking but appealing interface to it. If you want to set up a system for the kids, this is the version to use.

Ubuntu has rightly become one of the most popular Linux distributions, and here (in my opinion) is why:

- Everything is free. (Well this is true of all Linux distros more or less – although some hide the freeness a bit, but it is such a good reason to use Linux over old fashioned Operating Systems, it is worth mentioning)
- Sane Package management using APT. Installing new packages is really child’s play.
- Debian based (which is why the package management is so good)
- Free CDs are available
- Supported by a benevolent billionaire – this distro is not going to vanish like some have done
- Desktop neutral. Gnome or KDE? You choose. Kubuntu is released alongside Ubuntu.
- Focus on education with the edubuntu distro
- Well designed
- Things just work. (Well perhaps not quite as well as Apple systems just work – yet… but moreso than any other Linux I have used. This is the distro you can give to a novice user and know they will do better than with a Microsoft offering)
- Multilingual. This is an international project, and the internationalisation work shows through
- No viruses, bsods, annoying warnings etc. Just the security and stability of a Unix core. A lesson that Steve Jobs took to Apple with OS X’s Darwin core

So if you didn’t quite get any of the above, don’t worry. Just go and get Ubuntu. get the live CD and try it out. Install it on the old computer in the kid’s “office”. One way or another, give it a test drive… it’s not scary!

    One Response to “Ubuntu Feisty Fawn”

    1. on 24 Apr 2007 at 8:54 pmMark

      Nice review of Ubuntu Feisty Fawn! (you gotta love Linux distribution naming practices)

      I was a long time user of RedHat/Fedora and SuSE, although I’ve dabbled a bit in Slackware, Debian, etc. I’d probably still be using SuSE if it weren’t for headaches with RPMs. This is not an isolated incident, there has been a wholesale migration away from RPM based distributions (case in point: Eric Raymond).

      My experiences with Ubuntu have not been perfect. There’s been annoyances, but they are fairly minor. The package management is really slick and upgrading/installing packages is simple and even upgrading to the next Ubuntu release was close to effortless.

      I agree, this is THE distribution to test-drive.

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