Greg KH's 'Clanker' Terminator Fuzzer Crushes Linux Kernel Bugs Overnight
Your next Linux server won't bluescreen on a whim. Greg KH's new fuzzing arsenal — dubbed 'Clanker T1000' — is already squashing kernel bugs at warp speed.
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Your next Linux server won't bluescreen on a whim. Greg KH's new fuzzing arsenal — dubbed 'Clanker T1000' — is already squashing kernel bugs at warp speed.
Linus Torvalds eyes an on-time Linux 7.0 drop. rc7 piles on fixes — including AI agent docs that scream 'lazy devs ahead.'
FreeBSD on a laptop? Often a nightmare of non-working WiFi and touchpads. The Foundation's new testing project throws the ball to you, the community.
Picture this: firing up a video call on your beefy Ryzen AI laptop, only for the webcam to ghost you because Linux hasn't caught up yet. AMD's fixing that with ISP4 in kernel 7.2.
Picture this: your laptop chugs through renders without hiccups, servers hum endlessly, Android phones update flawlessly. Linux kernel 7.0-rc7 just made that everyday reality a notch closer.
Bluesky was supposed to be Twitter 2.0, all sleek apps and web feeds. Skyscraper flips that: a Rust terminal client that delivers the AT Protocol's promise straight to your CLI, no distractions.
Picture firing up your favorite rolling-release distro on a kernel that's been a ghost story for decades. Gentoo just made GNU/Hurd playable — for real people who love pushing open source boundaries.
Kernel panics? Fixed. Linux 6.6.133 yanks a botched backport, saving devs from crashes on extended attribute ops. Here's why this tiny tweak keeps the open-source beast roaring.
Linux won't quit on the Dreamcast. Even in 2026, kernel hackers are patching in support for its GD-ROM format, breathing new life into 1999 hardware.
Imagine firing up a 1989 Intel i486 in 2025—Linux just said no. Kernel devs are purging decades-old baggage, freeing resources for tomorrow's silicon.
Imagine rebooting your Linux rig after a crash, only to find every window exactly where you left it. Wayland's xdg-session-management protocol just made that dream real — after a glacial six-year wait.
Picture this: a Linux legend bows out after 12 years, AI promises to audit every shady binary, and Gentoo trolls with a Hurd switcheroo. FOSS Force's top five articles from the week ending April 3 pack more drama than a distro release cycle.