The Emmabuntüs Collective has released Emmabuntüs Debian Edition 6, a GNU/Linux distribution aimed at refurbishing old computers. This version builds on Debian 13.2 Trixie with the Linux 6.12 LTS kernel and emphasizes accessibility enhancements. It marks the first edition without 32-bit support, available only as a 64-bit live ISO.
Patrick d’Emmabuntüs from the Emmabuntüs Collective announced the availability of Emmabuntüs Debian Edition 6 1.00 on December 16, 2025. This release arrives two and a half years after Edition 5 and targets users refurbishing older hardware.
The distribution uses Debian 13.2 “Trixie” as its base and incorporates the Linux 6.12 LTS kernel for broader hardware compatibility. It retains a dual-desktop approach, with Xfce 4.20 as the primary environment for live sessions and LXQt 2.1 as a lighter alternative.
A key focus is on accessibility, introducing features activated via a dedicated interface. These include speech synthesis during navigation, three Orca profiles, and a script to display laptop battery levels. Additional tools support MBROLA and Piper speech synthesizers, provide an accessible USB unmount window for blind users, add insertion beeps for USB drives in accessibility mode, integrate LIOS for optical character recognition, and offer a script for installing the Index Braille embosser.
The edition also includes nmap for local network printer detection, espeakup for speech synthesis in console mode (TTY), and scripts to disable or restore boot splash screens and desktop backgrounds for visually impaired users. KDE Connect is now bundled for device integration. Braille display support has been enhanced, along with the system update script. Speech synthesizer usage is standardized, 6-dot shortcuts now launch LibreOffice and Geany, and the accessibility manual has been redesigned in English and French.
Beyond accessibility, improvements cover encrypted installations, a default 50% sound volume, a simplified Wine installation script, replacement of ZuluCrypt-GUI with LuckyLUKS, and fixes for locale bugs and timezone selection. Users can download the 64-bit live ISO from the official website, reflecting Debian's upstream shift away from 32-bit systems.