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AMDgpu is an open source device driver for the Linux operating system developed by AMD to support its Radeon lineup of graphics cards (GPUs). It was announced in 2014 as the successor to the previous radeon device driver as part of AMD's new "unified" driver strategy, [3] and was released on April 20, 2015.
Name License Source model Target uses Status Platforms Apache Mynewt: Apache 2.0: open source: embedded: active: ARM Cortex-M, MIPS32, Microchip PIC32, RISC-V: BeRTOS: Modified GNU GPL: open source
Intel Core processors; AMD 5x86, K5, K6, Athlon (all 32-bit versions), Duron, Sempron; x86-64: 64-bit processor architecture, now officially known as AMD64 (AMD) or Intel64 (Intel); supported by the Athlon 64, Opteron and Intel Core 2 processors, among others; Cyrix 5x86, 6x86 (M1), 6x86MX and MediaGX (National/AMD Geode) series
Armbian is a computing build framework that allows users to create system images with configurations for various single-board computers (SBCs). [2] Armbian's objective is to unify the experience across ARM single-board computers, while maintaining performance with hardware-specific optimizations.
In Debian Linux and derivatives such as Ubuntu and Linux Mint, armhf (ARM hard float) refers to the ARMv7 architecture including the additional VFP3-D16 floating-point hardware extension (and Thumb-2) above. Software packages and cross-compiler tools use the armhf vs. arm/armel suffixes to differentiate.
This is a table of 64/32-bit central processing units that implement the ARMv8-A instruction set architecture and mandatory or optional extensions of it. Most chips support the 32-bit ARMv7-A for legacy applications.
Intel Meteor Lake Graphics declared stable [21] Initial Nouveau support for Nvidia GSP firmware [21] Ability to disable IA-32 support at boot time on AMD64 [22] Expansion of AMD Seamless Boot Support [22] Improvement in loading of x86 microcode [22] Support for RAID stripe tree, simple quota accounting, and temporary FSID added to Btrfs [23]
Parrot is based on Debian's "stable" branch, with a Linux 6.1 kernel. It follows a LTS development model. [3]The desktop environment is MATE, and the default display manager is LightDM.