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Do you waddle the waddle?
The camera is based on the STM32N6570 MCU, which integrates an Arm Cortex-M55 core with Helium vector extensions and an on-chip Neural-ART accelerator delivering up to 0.6 TOPS of AI performance. This allows the device to run lightweight computer vision workloads such as person detection, gesture recognition, and event-based monitoring locally, reducing latency and power consumption.
The hardware platform is based on the Rockchip RV1106G3 system-on-chip, which integrates a single Arm Cortex-A7 core with 256MB of RAM.
Powered by the latest and greatest Linux 6.18 kernel series (with SYSRQ support), PorteuX 2.5 ships with no less than eight editions featuring the GNOME 49.2, KDE Plasma 6.5.4, Cinnamon 6.6, LXQt 2.3, COSMIC 1.0, Xfce 4.20, LXDE 0.11.1, and MATE 1.28.2 desktop environments.
Coming seven months after Inkscape 1.4.2, the Inkscape 1.4.3 release improves PDF import, ungrouping of big groups, converting of strokes to paths, patterns, and gradients to no longer be lost, aligning on a circle or arc to be more reliable, and the Text on Path feature to also work with rectangles.
Coming three weeks after GStreamer 1.26.9, the GStreamer 1.26.10 release introduces support for FLAC audio in DASH manifests, support for a custom Sony XDCAM video variant to mxf, multichannel and surround sound handling improvements to the OPUS encoder (opusenc), and splitmuxsrc seeking improvements.
Coming four months after QEMU 10.1, the QEMU 10.2 release introduces live update support via a new ‘cpr-exec’ migration mode, which allows for reduced resource usage when updating virtual machines, and potential for re-using existing state/connections throughout update.
Tux Machines places great emphasis on covering both GNU and Linux. We occasionally also cover other Free and Open Source operating systems, as well as games, applications, instructional posts, and, very occasionally, relevant proprietary software.