Linux open-source projects release multiple updates in week 8 of 2026

The Linux and free open-source software community experienced a busy week from February 16 to 22, 2026, with several distribution refreshes and software enhancements. Highlights include updates to desktop environments, audio tools, and productivity applications. Linuxiac's weekly roundup captures these developments.

During the week of February 16 to 22, 2026, the Linux ecosystem saw notable activity across distributions and software projects. Sparky Linux released version 8.2, updating its KDE Plasma, LXQt, MATE, and Openbox editions. Similarly, DietPi 10.1 arrived, adding support for NanoPi Zero2 hardware and integration with WhoDB.

In desktop environments, KDE Plasma 6.6 launched with new features, while COSMIC Desktop 1.0.7 enhanced its workspaces overview. KDE also addressed concerns about an alleged systemd mandate and previewed Plasma 6.7's desktop switching in the overview. Budgie Desktop shared details on Preview 1 of version 11, introducing multi-panel support and tiling capabilities.

Software updates were plentiful. Fish Shell 4.5 resolved vi mode issues and improved history search. PipeWire 1.6 added an LDAC decoder and support for 128-channel audio. Lutris 0.5.20 better integrated Proton and included Steam Family Source. Transmission 4.1.1 improved performance for the BitTorrent client, and Bottles 62.0 supported dynamic launcher portals. Calibre 9.3 enhanced KEPUB handling in the e-book manager, while LibreOffice 25.8.5 fixed 62 bugs in Writer, Calc, and Impress.

Mobile and utility advancements included Ubuntu Touch updates to 24.04-1.2 and 20.04 OTA-12, featuring VoLTE and fixes for Xperia X devices. Other developments encompassed a MinIO fork by the open-source community, a Bitwarden survey on 2026 privacy tools, Pocketblue adapting Fedora Atomic for mobiles, Netbase porting NetBSD utilities to Linux, Let’s Encrypt's DNS-PERSIST-01 validation method, and Oracle's new MySQL community strategy.

These releases underscore ongoing innovation in the open-source world, as reported by Linuxiac.

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The Linux and open-source ecosystem experienced a flurry of software releases and project announcements during the week of February 2 to 8, 2026. Key developments included enhancements to desktop environments, productivity tools, and security-focused initiatives, reflecting ongoing innovation in the FOSS world.

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