#Performance

News stories tagged with #Performance

Widely Covered

Linux Ecosystem in Motion: Security Updates, Performance Boosts, and New Technologies

The Linux ecosystem is undergoing significant developments: Libinput has released security patches for critical vulnerabilities, while CachyOS and Rust Coreutils deliver performance improvements. Redox OS introduces a new CPU scheduler, Miracle-WM adds a WebAssembly plugin system, and ASUS hints at a 20th-anniversary special edition for its ROG Crosshair series. These advancements highlight the rapid evolution of open-source software and hardware innovation.

Intel Unveils Core Ultra 400 Series and Core Ultra X9 378H with Up to 28 Cores

Intel has unveiled the Nova Lake-HX series of Core Ultra 400 processors with up to 28 cores in notebooks, based on two compute tiles and featuring 144 MB of L3 cache. Additionally, the Core Ultra X9 378H from the Panther-Lake series was introduced, a 16-core processor with a maximum turbo frequency of 5.0 GHz and the powerful Intel Arc B390 iGPU. Both processors target consumers, with the X9 378H lacking vPro support and other business features. Official details on the Nova Lake-HX series are expected by the end of the year.

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Microsoft Prepares Major Windows 11 Improvements: From Offline Login to Faster Updates

Microsoft is preparing major improvements for Windows 11, including removing the mandatory online login, integrating NVMe SSD performance enhancements, and introducing a faster File Explorer and movable taskbar. The updates aim to boost system performance through reduced resource usage and a more responsive interface. These changes are set to begin rolling out in March 2026 via the Insider program and will be gradually released throughout the year, following the temporary withdrawal of a problematic feature update due to widespread installation errors.

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Peropesis 3.2 Released – Linux with Pure CLI, Blender Performance Gains, and Linux 7.1 HDMI Support for RISC-V

The Linux distribution Peropesis 3.2 has been released, continuing its focus on a pure command-line environment with Kernel 6.18.2 and Bash 5.3. Meanwhile, the fourth iteration of Virtual Swap Space patches aims to enhance Linux's swap design, while Linux 7.1 is expected to bring working HDMI support for the affordable Lichee Pi 4A RISC-V board. Additionally, Blender 5.1 delivers noticeable CPU rendering performance improvements on Linux systems.

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Linux 7.1: Enhanced Power Management, Expanded Hardware Support, and Improved API Documentation

The Linux 7.1 kernel introduces significant improvements, including a unified C-states table for Intel Panther Lake processors to enhance power management, enhanced support for AMD Ryzen AI NPUs, and preparation for UHBR DP tunnels in the Intel graphics driver. It also removes UDP-Lite to streamline networking code, integrates HID drivers for the Lenovo Legion Go gaming handhelds, and advances the Linux Kernel API Specification Framework beyond the RFC stage. These updates improve performance, hardware compatibility, and kernel documentation.

EndeavourOS 2026.03.06 with Linux Kernel 6.19.6 and Enhanced Installer – Intel Compute Runtime 26.09.37435.1 Delivers Graphics Performance Boosts

The new EndeavourOS 2026.03.06, named after the moon Titan, is based on Linux kernel 6.19.6 and introduces installer improvements such as Vulkan driver support and enhanced hardware detection. Meanwhile, Intel’s Compute Runtime 26.09.37435.1 delivers new features and performance optimizations for Intel graphics hardware on both Windows and Linux, including multi-device support and future platform readiness. These updates collectively enhance user experience and graphics performance across modern computing environments.

Major Story

Nvidia Boosts Linux Gaming with New Drivers and AI Claims – GeForce RTX 50 Series Show Impressive Performance Gains

Nvidia has released a new beta driver for Linux, significantly boosting GeForce GPU performance through enhanced Vulkan extensions and optimizations. CEO Jensen Huang emphasized Nvidia’s pivotal role in shaping the modern gaming industry and hailed Openclaw as the most important software release of all time. Meanwhile, the Vulkan API introduced the VK_KHR_device_address_commands extension, enabling direct use of device addresses. Early benchmarks of the new 595 driver showed substantial improvements in OpenGL, Vulkan, and GPU compute tasks, particularly on GeForce RTX 50 series cards.

AMD Releases Ryzen Chipset Driver 8.02.18.557 with Bug Fixes and New Features

AMD has released the Ryzen Chipset Driver 8.02.18.557, enhancing compatibility and performance for Ryzen processors. The update fixes numerous known issues, includes two older driver versions, and features an updated installation routine. Available for Windows 10 and Windows 11, the driver supports various AMD platforms.

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Linux 7.0-rc3 Released: Major Updates for AMD and Intel CPUs, Drivers, and Security

Linux 7.0-rc3 has been released, marking one of the largest release candidates in recent history. It includes significant updates for AMDXDNA Ryzen AI drivers, graphics drivers, and security and performance enhancements for both Intel and AMD CPUs. Linus Torvalds noted the unusually large size due to a backlog of contributions. The kernel will serve as the default for Ubuntu 26.04 LTS and Fedora 44, with ongoing testing to stabilize it before the final release.

Linux 7.0 Delivers Major Performance Gains via AI-Assisted Debugging and PostgreSQL Optimizations on AMD EPYC

Linux 7.0 delivers significant PostgreSQL performance improvements on AMD EPYC Turin servers compared to Linux 6.19, with benchmark results achieved using identical hardware and software configurations for reliability. Additionally, Jens Axboe discovered a 50- to 80-fold performance boost in Linux's IO_uring by using AI-assisted debugging in AHCI/SCSI code, resolving a major bottleneck in idle systems with a single line of code. The fix is now being prepared for inclusion in the mainline kernel. These advancements highlight AI's growing role in kernel optimization and the enhanced performance of modern Linux releases.

Major Story

Linux 7.0: Performance Gains, Memory Optimization, and Enhanced Support for Modern Hardware

The Linux 7.0 kernel introduces significant improvements, including enhanced sequential read performance for exFAT, dynamic thread pool sizing for the NFS server, and 8D-8D-8D-Octal DTR support for faster SPI NAND transfers. It also optimizes F2FS performance, expands the Sheaves memory allocation system, and adds support for new Intel chipsets. The kernel removes outdated drivers like the Intel 440BX EDAC driver and strengthens Rust kernel driver support. These updates simplify customization and improve efficiency in modern and embedded systems.