Did Donald Trump just promote Linux on Twitter? Not exactly
Trump’s penguin post fooled Linux nerds, but the image fits his real second-term push for Greenland and Arctic influence.
Trump’s penguin post fooled Linux nerds, but the image fits his real second-term push for Greenland and Arctic influence.
GNU Guix 1.5.0 is the first release in three years, bringing new desktops, security improvements, full-source bootstraps, and a more structured future for the distribution.
MX Linux 25.1 Infinity is now available, landing just one week after the beta and officially bringing back dual-init support with systemd and sysvinit on the same ISO. The release is based on Debian 13.3, ships updated Linux kernels, refreshes AHS graphics stacks, and restores one of MX Linux’s most distinctive features without forcing existing users to change their setups.
Mozilla has released official Firefox Nightly RPM packages, letting Fedora, openSUSE, and other RPM-based Linux users install and update Nightly like any native app.
Raspberry Pi finally brings local generative AI to the Pi 5 with the new AI HAT+ 2 featuring a Hailo 10H accelerator and 8GB RAM enabling compact language and vision models to run without cloud connections while keeping user data private.
Linux Mint 22.3 Zena delivers LTS stability, hardware friendly improvements, and a cleaner Cinnamon desktop. It remains one of the easiest Linux distros for everyday users and a smart option for reviving old Windows machines.
Wine 11.0 arrives with a year of development work, more than six thousand changes, and broad improvements across graphics, WoW64 compatibility, gaming, and system performance. From Vulkan and Direct3D tweaks to new Wayland desktop features and better device support, this release marks a confident leap forward for Windows application support on Linux.
MX Linux 25.1 Infinity beta doesn’t look like a huge update on paper. But by restoring dual init support on every ISO, MX is once again giving Linux users something most distros removed years ago: real choice.
Mageia 10 officially enters its public testing phase with the arrival of the first alpha build. The community powered Linux distribution is looking for testers to download, install, file bugs, and share early experiences as work continues toward a planned April 2026 final release.
Nitrux 5.1.0 rolls out with a hardware validation layer, updated packages, and a continued push toward immutable systems built for real hardware. The update favors clarity and modern workflows over universal compatibility.
The TUXEDO InfinityBook Max 16 is a slim metal Linux laptop that wants to be everything in one package. With an Intel Core Ultra 9 processor, NVIDIA RTX graphics, optional OLED screen, and room for 128GB memory, it blends developer friendly power with gaming ready muscle.
The Star Labs Horizon laptop puts ownership back in the user’s hands with coreboot, a hardware kill switch, a tall 3:2 display, multiple Linux distribution options and user replaceable parts. With an i3-N305 chip, 32GB memory and up to 2TB storage it gives Linux lovers a system on their terms.