Coming two and a half months after Debian 13.1, the Debian 13.2 point release offers updated installation media to those who want to deploy the latest Debian Trixie operating system on new hardware or those who had issues with the previous ISO images.
Highlights of Mesa 25.3 include Vulkan 1.2 support for the PVR Vulkan driver for modern PowerVR graphics hardware, Blackwell support for NVK, support for new Vulkan extensions in the PanVK, ANV, RADV, NVK, HoneyKrisp, and PVR drivers, as well as support for new OpenGL extensions for the V3D, Panfrost, R300, Zink, and RadeonSI drivers.
KDE Frameworks 6.20 brings many goodies, including predictable/learnable KRunner search result ordering, a fancier push/pop animation for System Settings pages, and a reversed version of the “Open link” Breeze icon for right-to-left (RTL) languages, such as Arabic or Hebrew.
Proton 10 is a massive update that introduces support for new games, which are now playable on Linux. These include Mary Skelter: Nightmares, Fairy Fencer F Advent Dark Force, Far Horizon, Grim Fandango Remastered (AMD & Intel GPUs), The Crew Motorfest, Viking Rise: Valhalla, Starlight Re:Volver, and Gemstones.
Like the earlier Waveshare ESP32-P4-WIFI6 development board, this platform also uses a dual-processor architecture pairing the ESP32-P4 as the main MCU with an ESP32-C6 module that handles Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5 LE connectivity. The ESP32-C6 communicates with the ESP32-P4 over an SDIO interface and integrates an external antenna connector for wireless operation.
The BM1688 datasheet does not appear to be available on the SOPHGO website yet, but Banana Pi notes that the processor integrates an eight-core Arm Cortex-A53 CPU running at 1.6GHz and provides 16 TOPS of INT8 performance.
Both devices are built around the RVC4 compute platform, incorporating an 8-core ARM CPU from Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8-series, 8GB of RAM, and 128GB of onboard storage. The architecture supports 48 TOPS of INT8 performance and 12 TOPS in FP16 workloads.