Asus and Ubuntu deliver affordable world-class laptops to USA Education
Canonical
on 26 November 2013
A quiet revolution is taking place in the global education sector: more and more institutions and students are discovering the value of the Ubuntu operating system.
In the USA, Ubuntu partner ASUS has added to its long line of Ubuntu laptops. The X201E and 1015E are high-quality, affordable Ubuntu laptops, perfect for education.
As Ubuntu, and all the software bundled on it is free, there’s no licence fees in the purchase price which significantly reduces cost. This is perfect for students and institutions, both of whose finances can be hard pressed.
Productivity applications are taken care of by LibreOffice. Familiar feeling, they offer all the functionality students and staff need and are fully compatible with existing files from the leading proprietary alternative. There are also bundled free applications for email and web browsing.
Beyond these basics thousands of other free, open-source applications are available to meet more specific needs from image processing and 3D animation to anti-virus or accounting.
We know that effective personal computing is vital to students and Institutions, so it’s exciting for us to work with our partners to bring these low-cost, high-performance packages into the education sector.
For more information see Amazon.com and other good online retailers.
Talk to us today
Interested in running Ubuntu in your organisation?
Newsletter signup
Related posts
Canonical announces it will distribute NVIDIA DOCA-OFED in Ubuntu
Today Canonical, the publishers of Ubuntu, announced that it will integrate and distribute the NVIDIA DOCA-OFED networking driver with Ubuntu.
Meet Canonical at NVIDIA GTC 2026: NVIDIA CUDA and NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 support in Ubuntu 26.04 LTS
Previewing at NVIDIA GTC 2026: NVIDIA CUDA support in Ubuntu 26.04 LTS, NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 architecture support in Ubuntu 26.04, Canonical’s official...
AppArmor vulnerability fixes available
Qualys discovered several vulnerabilities in the AppArmor code of the Linux kernel. These are being referred to as CrackArmor, while CVE IDs have not been...