Performance

Tẹ̀lé
Photo illustrating the Asus ROG Ally X handheld PC performing better on Linux than Windows, with a split-screen comparison of frame rates in a tech setup.

Rog xbox ally x performs better on linux than windows

Lisa Kern Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Tests on the Asus Rog Xbox Ally X handheld gaming PC reveal significant performance improvements when running the Linux-based Bazzite operating system compared to Windows. Content creator Cyber Dopamine demonstrated higher frame rates, greater stability, and faster sleep and wake times in his recent YouTube video. The device can dual-boot between the two systems for flexibility.

Intel's Linux kernel patches improve database performance by 18 percent

Lisa Kern

Intel has developed new patches for the Linux kernel that deliver an 18% increase in database performance. The changes were reported by Phoronix.

Linux kernel patch fixes Intel Chromebook performance regression

The Linux kernel community has merged a patch to address a serious performance regression affecting Intel-powered Chromebooks. The fix, incorporated ahead of the 6.18-rc3 release, targets issues in power management tied to Intel's hybrid CPU architectures. This resolution aims to improve CPU scaling and user experience on devices running Chrome OS.

Sheaves project aims to boost Linux performance

Developers are working on Sheaves to replace CPU slabs in the Linux kernel, potentially improving system performance. This initiative is covered in recent Phoronix updates on Linux hardware and benchmarks.

Linux 6.18 enhances AMD EPYC Turin performance

Lisa Kern

The Linux 6.18 kernel introduces optimizations that boost performance on AMD's EPYC Turin processors by up to 10% in multi-threaded workloads compared to Linux 6.17. These improvements target AI, high-performance computing, and database tasks on the Zen 5-based chips. Benchmarks from Phoronix highlight gains in scheduling, memory management, and power efficiency.

Linux 6.19 boosts AES-GCM performance on AMD Zen 3

Lisa Kern

The Linux 6.19 kernel delivers up to 74% faster AES-GCM cryptographic performance for AMD Zen 3 processors. This improvement stems from optimizations in the kernel's crypto subsystem. Phoronix reports these gains based on hardware benchmarks.

Oju opo wẹẹbu yii n lo kuki

A n lo kuki fun àlàyé lati le mu didara oju opo wẹẹbu wa dara. Ka eto imulo wa eto imulo fun alaye diẹ sii.
Kọ