The Linux distribution Peropesis 3.2 has been released, continuing its commitment to a pure command-line environment powered by Kernel 6.18.2 and Bash 5.3. The update includes numerous package upgrades such as Git 2.53.0, Ruby 4.0.1, and gnutls 3.8.12, along with twelve new applications, and is available as a 64-bit Live ISO weighing in at 410 MB. Peropesis remains a top choice for developers and system administrators who prioritize minimalism, stability, and efficiency. On the kernel development front, the fourth iteration of the Virtual Swap Space patches has been released, aiming to enhance Linux’s swap design by abstracting swap entries from physical storage. These changes are intended to improve performance and enable future features such as multi-tier swapping and swapfile compaction, while reducing overhead and simplifying operations like swapoff. Meanwhile, the upcoming Linux 7.1 kernel is expected to include working HDMI support for the Lichee Pi 4A RISC-V board, enabled by DeviceTree patches for the T-Head TH1520 SoC and its HDMI controller. The board, which features 8GB or 16GB of RAM and PowerVR graphics, is one of the most affordable RISC-V single-board computers, making it a significant platform for advancing RISC-V software development. In the realm of creative software, Blender 5.1 delivers noticeable improvements in CPU rendering performance on Linux systems, with render speeds up to a few percent faster than in Blender 5.0. These gains are particularly evident on high-end systems such as the System76 Thelio Mira, equipped with AMD Ryzen processors and NVIDIA RTX hardware, highlighting the growing importance of open-source 3D tools in professional workflows. Together, these developments reflect a broader trend of innovation across the Linux ecosystem, from lightweight distributions and kernel optimizations to enhanced hardware support and performance gains in creative applications.