Linux 7.0-rc7: Linus Tempts Fate with On-Time Hopes
Linus Torvalds eyes an on-time Linux 7.0 drop. rc7 piles on fixes — including AI agent docs that scream 'lazy devs ahead.'
One button. Eternal spinner. Zero results. The Unhelpful Helper 3000 isn't fixing your problems—it's amplifying them for laughs. Finally, someone admits UI design is often a joke.
Linus Torvalds eyes an on-time Linux 7.0 drop. rc7 piles on fixes — including AI agent docs that scream 'lazy devs ahead.'
Everyone braced for the FCC's router ban to torch imports and custom firmware dreams. Turns out, it's a dud for FOSS fans—user freedom holds firm.
FreeBSD on a laptop? Often a nightmare of non-working WiFi and touchpads. The Foundation's new testing project throws the ball to you, the community.
A __proto__ header just nuked your server. Node.js's March 24, 2026 security releases fix that—and seven other nasties lurking in your code.
Picture this: firing up a video call on your beefy Ryzen AI laptop, only for the webcam to ghost you because Linux hasn't caught up yet. AMD's fixing that with ISP4 in kernel 7.2.
Dozens of security updates hit AlmaLinux, Debian, and Fedora this Monday, zeroing in on GStreamer stacks, kernels, and privacy tools like Tor. Skip them at your peril—here's the data-driven breakdown.
Forget the hype—Ubuntu 26.04 beta means tinkerers get first dibs on kernel 7.0 and shiny icons, but production rigs? Steer clear. Here's why real people should pause.
Picture this: your laptop chugs through renders without hiccups, servers hum endlessly, Android phones update flawlessly. Linux kernel 7.0-rc7 just made that everyday reality a notch closer.
Sashiko promises smarter code reviews with AI. But Brian Exelbierd's data says it's dropping pre-existing bug alerts like confetti — mostly not, until it does, hard.
BenQ just dropped Display Pilot 2 for Linux, unlocking full control over its programmer monitors. For Ubuntu coders, it's a game-changer that syncs hardware with your workflow.
Your kubeconfig might be running mystery code on your machine. Kubernetes 1.35 slams the door with exec plugin allowLists—simple, beta-ready security that feels like a bouncer for your credentials.
Node.js just axed its biannual release frenzy for a single annual drop, every version minting as LTS. Volunteers are thrilled; skeptics wonder if it'll spark innovation or just complacency.