Linux Weekly Daily Wednesday
Latest Episodes
LWDW 385: Debian Makes RISC-V Official
Debian makes RISC-V an official architecture! Davinci Resolve 18.5 exits beta, Framework opens preorders for their 16" laptop, and wireless DOOM on a Pi Zero W2.
LWDW 384: 30 Years Of Slacking!
Slackware turns 30! AlmaLinux OS drops bug-for-bug compatibility with Red Hat, a Pi 2040 powered ergonomic keyboard with balls, and Windows-like resource monitoring with Mission Center.
LWDW 383: Thunderbird goes Supernova & segmenting RGBs!
Thunderbird is getting a fresh new look! OpenRGb learns to segment, why you should use video hardware acceleration on Linux, and Solus 4.4 drops MATE.
LWDW 382: ReactOS lives! Firefox ❤️ Intel GPUs, and RIP GoXLR
Firefox enables hardware decoding for Intel GPUs on Linux! ReactOS reminds everyone they're still alive, a Pi Zero W powered handheld that runs DOOM, and Music Tribe nukes the GoXLR development team.
LWDW 381: GoXLR on Linux, Rocky Red Hats, and dot matrix trucks?
Rocky and Alma react to the changes at Red Hat, Linux kernel 6.4 gets a P-State driver extension for AMD, GoXLR on Linux nears 1.0, and a pi-powered truck printer.
LWDW 380: Red Hat Limits RHEL Source Availability
CentOS Stream will now be the sole repository RHEL-related source code releases, Intel discontinues ARC A770 LE, Opera's AI browser comes to Linux, functional retro desktoping with the Not so Common D
LWDW 379: Unified Linux Desktop
Debian 12 is out! Unifying the PC desktops with Kera, poking the Presonus ioStation with a Linux stick, and a Pi powered robo dingo.
LWDW 378: Neural Amp Modeling with Linux and LibreOffice gets a Flat
RedHat is winds down support for LibreOffice, simulating guitar amps with NAM, spoopy ASCII text with Calligraphy, and mangling video with the recurBOY.
LWDW 377: Wayland Is (almost) Ready
Fedora KDE Plasma spin is dropping X11! 2 million Raspberry Pi's prepare to ship, reverse-engineering IRIX, and building a ISA sound card with PicoGUS.
LWDW 376: Bodhi Linux 7 & 8088 Laptops
Bodhi Linux 7 is looking for testers! Modern 8088 powered retro laptops, measuring progress on the command line, and a slick homebrew Linux handheld.