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Date: 2026-03-09 16:52 | Last update:



2026-03-09

KDE 1705 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

digiKam 9.0.0 fixes a host of long‑standing problems while adding a slick UI overhaul, better raw‑camera coverage, and a handy Survey window for second‑screen reviews. The Libraw engine now recognises Canon R5 Mark II, Sony A7C II, Panasonic GH7, and many more models that previously caused “unknown format” errors or slow processing. Face detection has been rewritten to cut scan times in half, and Wayland support is no longer a headache on Linux systems. After downloading the appropriate installer or AppImage from the digiKam site, a quick update check confirms you’re running the latest build—time to enjoy a smoother photo‑management experience.

Reviews 52580 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Several tech reviewers have been busy reviewing various gadgets and products, including audio equipment like Fosi MD3 Smartphone DACs and external GPU docks from GMKtec. In addition to technology reviews, there are also articles on cooling systems such as the SAMA L70 360WH AIO cooler and CPU coolers like Noctua's NH-D15 G2 chromax.black. Other product reviews include power banks, specifically Cuktech's 15 Air model, and liquid CPU coolers like the TRYX STAGE ARGB 360 AIO Liquid CPU Cooler. Meanwhile, movie enthusiasts can check out a review of the 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray release of TRON: Ares (2025).

Audio: Fosi MD3 Smartphone DAC Review - An affectionate audio backpack for smartphones with potential for your ears
Computers: GMKtec AD-GP1 External GPU dock with OCUlink and USB4 benchmarked, HP Zbook Ultra G1a "Ryzen AI MAX+ 395" Laptop Review: Testing Top Strix Halo Vs Top Panther Lake In 14" Form Factor, GMKtec NucBox K15 review: USB4, OCuLink, DDR5 memory, but no gaming Mini PC
Cooling: SAMA L70 360WH Review, Noctua NH-D15 G2 chromax.black Review, TRYX STAGE ARGB 360 AIO Liquid CPU Cooler Review
Power: Cuktech 15 Air review: Cutting-edge battery tech in a small form factor, Chieftec Stealth 1200W ATX v3.1 PSU Review
Other: TRON: Ares (2025) 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Review

CachyOS 8 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

The March 2026 CachyOS update delivers three practical upgrades: animated desktop previews that keep people from guessing what Plasma or GNOME feels like, smarter microcode logic that stops firmware mismatches from turning browsers into frozen messes, and a Handheld Edition revamp that finally lets Steam Deck owners patch firmware without an external USB drive. 

Linux 3318 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Linus Torvalds just released Linux Kernel 7.0‑rc3, a surprisingly large patch set largely composed of an expanded test suite rather than new features. The increase in size reflects the kernel team’s effort to catch regressions before the final 7.0 release, with most other changes being routine clean‑ups or hardware quirks. For everyday users this candidate remains experimental and best suited for testing on spare hardware or virtual machines. Once failures drop below a threshold, rc3 will be merged into the next branch, leading to the official 7.0 release in roughly a month after today’s announcement.

Software 44189 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

VSCodium 1.110.1 drops a tidy set of fixes that straighten out icon sizing in the status bar, tighten up tab spacing, and correct the pixel‑perfect look of the minimap’s bottom pane. The update also gives users a quick toggle to turn off Copilot’s inline suggestions, which can be a real nuisance after an extension hiccup. A simple JSON tweak disables those pop‑in hints while preserving the rest of the editor’s AI features. After a restart, the UI should feel smoother and the Copilot pop‑ups will no longer interrupt typing flow.

Software 44189 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

AM 9.9.5 introduces experimental checksum support that marks installed AppImages with a green checkmark whenever the binary’s digest matches an online .zsync or .DIGEST file, instantly indicating the app’s integrity. The feature runs on every install and upgrade, so a missing or mismatched checksum will be flagged right after the download completes, though failure does not automatically mean malware—it merely signals that the AppImage lacks a compliant checksum file. Enabling it is as simple as updating with am -u and then listing apps; verified packages will show the tick next to their version number. 

Software 44189 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

OBS Studio’s newest 32.1.0 patch introduces a clearer audio mixer, WebRTC simulcast for multi‑resolution streaming, and a fully functional undo/redo system that now covers scale filtering, blending mode, and deinterlacing settings. The update also tightens security on local browser sources and adds a convenient toggle to enable or disable missing plugins in the manager, cutting down on panel clutter with dock animation disabled and transition preview repositioned for easier access. On the bug‑fix side, crashes that previously occurred when switching profiles on Linux or shutting down macOS with active YouTube docks have been addressed, along with several other stability improvements such as eliminating null‑source crashes, correcting black thumbnails in recordings, and refining video scaling for multi‑video encoders.

SUSE 5582 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Several security updates have been released for SUSE Linux, including fixes for gitea-tea and chromium, which were labeled as moderate and important respectively. Additionally, multiple moderate-severity security updates address various packages such as kubeshark-cli, coredns, NetworkManager-applet-strongswan, chromedriver, and jetty-annotations on GA media. The release of these updates suggests that users should take action to ensure their system remains secure. It is essential for SUSE Linux users to review the available security patches and apply them promptly to protect against potential vulnerabilities.

openSUSE-SU-2026:0074-1: moderate: Security update for gitea-tea
openSUSE-SU-2026:0073-1: moderate: Security update for gitea-tea
openSUSE-SU-2026:0078-1: important: Security update for chromium
openSUSE-SU-2026:0077-1: important: Security update for chromium
openSUSE-SU-2026:10304-1: moderate: python311-nltk-3.9.3-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10302-1: moderate: kubeshark-cli-53.1.0-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10297-1: moderate: coredns-1.14.2-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10295-1: moderate: NetworkManager-applet-strongswan-1.6.4-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10296-1: moderate: chromedriver-145.0.7632.159-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10300-1: moderate: jetty-annotations-9.4.58-3.1 on GA media

Red Hat 9362 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Several important security updates have been made available for various Red Hat Enterprise Linux versions. These updates include patches for Thunderbird, Kpatch-patch, Git LFS, libvpx, and libpng15, among others. Each of these updates has a Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) base score that provides a detailed severity rating for each vulnerability. Users are advised to apply the updates as soon as possible to ensure their systems remain secure.

RHSA-2026:3982: Important: thunderbird security update
RHSA-2026:3987: Important: kpatch-patch-5_14_0-611_9_1 security update
RHSA-2026:3980: Important: thunderbird security update
RHSA-2026:3979: Important: thunderbird security update
RHSA-2026:3972: Important: git-lfs security update
RHSA-2026:3974: Important: git-lfs security update
RHSA-2026:3967: Important: libvpx security update
RHSA-2026:3969: Important: libpng15 security update
RHSA-2026:3970: Important: rhc-worker-playbook security update
RHSA-2026:3966: Moderate: kernel security update
RHSA-2026:3963: Moderate: kernel security update
RHSA-2026:3964: Moderate: kernel-rt security update

Fedora Linux 9271 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Fedora 42 has released updates for two packages: cef and k9s. The cef update includes a bump to version 145.0.28^chromium145.0.7632.159, which fixes several security vulnerabilities, including integer overflows and heap buffer overflows in various Chromium components. The k9s update is a newer version of the Kubernetes CLI tool, with no significant changes noted.

Fedora 42 Update: cef-145.0.28^chromium145.0.7632.159-1.fc42
Fedora 42 Update: k9s-0.50.18-1.fc42
2026-03-08

Security 10933 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Multiple Linux distributions, including AlmaLinux, Debian GNU/Linux, Fedora Linux, Oracle Linux, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Rocky Linux, and Ubuntu Linux, have released security updates to address vulnerabilities in various packages. The updates include fixes for issues such as denial-of-service, memory disclosure, and information leakage, which could affect the stability and security of Linux systems. Different versions of each distribution have been updated with patches for CVEs ranging from moderate to important levels of severity. Users are advised to run the appropriate command, such as "sudo apt update" or "sudo dnf upgrade -y," to apply the updates and ensure their systems remain secure.

Software 44189 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

A new VSCodium build now includes VS Code core 1.110.1, fixing a padding issue that left unwanted space around characters when fonts specify zero margins or padding. The update makes the editor honor explicit zero values instead of defaulting to an eight‑pixel buffer. After a quick check‑for‑updates and restart, code lines will align more tightly—especially with minimalist themes or custom font settings that rely on minimal spacing. This single tweak removes a visual glitch without any extra configuration work, giving editors a cleaner, more professional look.

GNOME 3706 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Bazaar 0.7.12 resolves an annoying parental‑control bug that had forced users into a child‑only mode whenever Windows’ settings couldn’t be read, restoring full access to all apps by defaulting to no restrictions. The update also refreshes Japanese and Czech translations, cleans up the featured carousel padding, and introduces a layout manager for consistent app tile widths across window sizes. Contextual titles, tooltips on “more info” links, and improved tooltip placement enhance usability without adding bulk. After installing this patch, any machine that previously showed only the default early‑childhood category will now display every installed application as expected.

Software 44189 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Wine Staging 11.4 brings the latest vkd3d patchset from Wine’s development branch, offering faster bug fixes for DirectX 12 games. Because it sits outside the main tree, experimental code can improve performance quickly but may still be flaky for some users. Installing the build is simple: grab “wine‑staging‑11.4‑x86_64.exe” from WineHQ, run it, and confirm with wine --version. After that, enabling DXVK in a Wine prefix usually delivers smoother gameplay with Vulkan translation.

Software 44189 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Wine 11.4 introduces a reimplemented SAX reader in native MSXML, speeding up large‑document parsing for office suites and scripts that expect Windows‑style streams. DirectSound’s resampling has been streamlined by dropping double‑precision math, swapping divisions with modulus operations, which keeps audio apps from hogging CPU during sample‑rate conversions. The release also starts a CFGMGR32 implementation to give applications a more realistic view of hardware devices and corrects Unix time‑zone matching to avoid one‑hour drift in date displays.

SUSE 5582 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

openSUSE has released several security updates to address vulnerabilities in various packages. These updates include fixes for libaec, chromium, helm, python-PyPDF2, python-uv, and gstreamer, among others. The updates resolve issues such as buffer overflows, integer overflows, and denial of service attacks, and are available for installation using the recommended openSUSE installation methods. Users are advised to install these security updates to ensure the integrity and security of their systems.

openSUSE-SU-2026:0072-1: moderate: Security update for libaec
openSUSE-SU-2026:20332-1: important: Security update for chromium
openSUSE-SU-2026:20327-1: moderate: Security update for helm
openSUSE-SU-2026:20333-1: important: Security update for python-PyPDF2
openSUSE-SU-2026:20330-1: important: Security update for python-uv
openSUSE-SU-2026:20329-1: moderate: Security update for gstreamer-rtsp-server, gstreamer-plugins-ugly, gstreamer-plugins-rs, gstreamer-plugins-libav, gstreamer-plugins-good, gstreamer-pl ...

Fedora Linux 9271 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Fedora has issued security updates for the Chromium Embedded Framework on both Fedora 43 and 44, bumping the packages to version 145.0.28 with chromium 145.0.7632.159 and addressing a range of CVEs that include integer overflows in ANGLE, Skia and V8, as well as heap buffer overflows in PDFium, WebCodecs and Media. The cef updates also note changes such as the adoption of C++20 for libcef and link to Bug #2437035 for more details. In addition, Fedora 43 received a patch for Vim 9.2.112 that fixes multiple CVEs (CVE‑2026‑28417 through CVE‑2026‑28422) involving command injection, buffer overflows and information disclosure in plugins and terminal handling, and users can apply these advisories with the dnf command dnf upgrade --advisory; all packages are signed with the Fedora Project GPG key.

Fedora 43 Update: cef-145.0.28^chromium145.0.7632.159-1.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: vim-9.2.112-2.fc43
Fedora 44 Update: cef-145.0.28^chromium145.0.7632.159-1.fc44

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