Armbian Imager is the official flashing utility designed for Armbian Linux, a stable Debian and Ubuntu-based system tailored for ARM single-board computers. The software supports a wide array of over 300 Armbian-compatible single-board computers, categorized by manufacturer. Shelly 2.3.2.2 has been released to enhance the support for CachyOS, an Arch Linux-based distribution, by aligning the CachyOS updater path with other features and offering a command to downgrade packages from the CachyOS repositories. Notably, Shelly now intuitively detects the user’s preferred repository.
The Star Labs Firmware 26.06 update focuses on supporting AMD Cezanne-based systems, improving battery-free operation and auto-rotation for StarLite Mk V laptops running Ubuntu, and resolving the blue sleep LED breathing issue on the StarBook MkVIr2-Intel laptop. Meanwhile, the Ardour 9.7 release builds upon the previous version by introducing a vertical summary option, enhancing interface functionality such as natural sort order, integrating MIDI Tools sidebar into the Editor, and refining the control surfaces listing.
Canonical confirmed that Ubuntu 26.10 will incorporate the latest GNOME 51 desktop environment and Linux 7.2 kernel series. GNOME 50.2 update includes rate control parameter implementation for VA-API H.264 screencast pipelines and accessibility improvements on the login screen. LibreOffice 26.2.4 delivers additional bug fixes and stability enhancements contributed by the global community of developers and QA engineers.
Retronix Technology introduces the Sparrow Hawk single-board computer powered by the Renesas R-Car V4H processor, tailored for applications like robotics, smart manufacturing, computer vision, and industrial edge systems. Radxa unveils upcoming NAS systems, DragonStation and DragonBay, featuring Qualcomm Snapdragon platform and Fygo OS for high-speed storage, multi-gigabit networking, media management, and private cloud capabilities.
The tech community continues to innovate, with projects like a hacked Yamaha THR10c amp, FDM printer improvements, an Uncooperative Mirror art installation, and a Compute Module 5 smartphone-sized computer meshed with a BlackBerry-derived keyboard. A DIY enthusiast upgraded their GPU setup affordably for running large-scale models efficiently. Lastly, customization of TUI apps to run on Android phones using Termux demonstrates the versatility and creativity of tech enthusiasts.
