What is on the DVD Edition of Ubuntu?

Just curious, because Google isn’t coming up with anything and Ubuntu.com is hardly descriptive; but what is the difference between Ubuntu CD .iso and the DVD .iso? What’s on the DVD that isn’t on the CD?

Asked By: Dante Ashton

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For 11.04 and earlier

The DVD contains all language packs, plus a few additional applications.

From http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/downloadmirrors#dvd:

Don’t be confused, even though DVDs
can hold far more data than the
typical Ubuntu CD, the main benefit of
the DVD downloads is to get access to
all of the available language packs.
Most people will be fine with the
standard CD installer. There are fewer
download locations for the DVD images
and this list is updated less
frequently than for the CD images.

Answered By: mgunes

http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/alternative-downloads

DVD downloads

Don’t be confused, even though DVDs
can hold far more data than the
typical Ubuntu CD, the main benefit of
the DVD downloads is to get access to
all of the available language packs.
Most people will be fine with the
standard CD installer. There are fewer
download locations for the DVD images
and this list is updated less
frequently than for the CD images.

Answered By: lovinglinux

Here is the answer to your question: Download the DVD edition. On DVD edition you can have access to all the available language packs.

Answered By: skalka

In addition to the other answers w/ the alternate area text, here’s a list of the files on the i386 version of Maverick:

http://mirror.anl.gov/pub/ubuntu-iso/DVDs/ubuntu/maverick/release/ubuntu-10.10-dvd-i386.list

Answered By: jasonbrooks

11.10 and newer

The DVD contains extra software:

The new DVD image is an extension of our current CD image to include all the language packs and some other useful applications, such as Inkscape, GIMP, Pitivi, and a more complete LibreOffice suite. All the packages that used to be on the DVD are still available from the archive.

The list of extra packages is available in this seed file, and here’s the full manifest.

Here are some of the major packages that are probably the most interesting for end users, (there are many more listed in the file so here are the highlights):

More drivers:

  • NVIDIA and ATI Drivers
  • bcmwl-kernel-source

Extra desktop Packages:

  • XChat GNOME (IRC client)
  • More complete LibreOffice suite
  • nautilus-gksu
  • GIMP (Image editor)
  • Inkscape (Vector image editor)
  • vim-tiny and vim-gnome (Text editor)
  • Liferea (RSS reader)
  • Pitivi (Video editor)
  • openprinting-ppds-extra (More PPDs for more printer support)
  • Screem (HTML editor)
  • Iced Tea plugin (Java)

Other:

  • Flac command line tools
  • More dictionaries
  • A bunch of documentation packages (monodoc, ubuntu-faqguide, basic HOWTOs from LDP, GIMP manuals)
  • The following language packs: en es xh pt de fr
  • Localization files and fonts

More about seeds here:

Answered By: Jorge Castro
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