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Date: 2026-06-08 16:58 | Last update:



2026-06-08

Reviews 52658 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Today's hardware and software roundup delivers a comprehensive look at the latest releases for tech enthusiasts. Cooling enthusiasts can evaluate the SilverStone XED120S server cooler alongside the ASTRA LZ360 ARGB liquid system that features an integrated matrix display. PC builders and gamers will find insights on the rebranded AMD Radeon RX 9070 GRE graphics card, the affordable Gigabyte Z890 Aorus Elite motherboard, and the large format Elegoo Jupiter 2 resin printer. The selection concludes with an immersive review of the 007 First Light spy game and a practical review of the compact DWARF mini smart telescope for everyday sky watching.

Cooling: SilverStone XED120S Review, ASTRA LZ360 ARGB BK Review: Innovative Matrix Display-Equipped 360mm AIO
Gaming: 007 First Light review: Satisfying spy adventure that James Bond needed
Graphics Cards: AMD Radeon RX 9070 GRE Review: An Awkward Addition to the Lineup
Motherboards: Gigabyte Z890 Aorus Elite Wifi7 Plus Motherboard Review: Cost-conscious refresh board delivers (almost) all the fixens
Printers: Elegoo Jupiter 2 Resin 3D Printer review: The giant returns for round two
Other: DWARF mini review: the world's smallest smart telescope for night and day sky captures

GNOME 3719 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Bazaar 0.8.2 stops that infinite hang when the app tries to calculate your Flatpak user data folder size. The update brings a practical mobile search filter that actually makes browsing Flathub on smaller windows usable again. Developers wisely scrapped the pointless rotating pride flag and cluttered tag lists to focus on cleaner network subcategories and proper localization. Anyone managing a GNOME desktop should grab this release to keep their app store responsive and free of unnecessary visual noise.

Linux 3370 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Linux Kernel 7.1 RC7 arrives as the final release candidate with a noticeably smaller patch count that prioritizes stability over new features. The update concentrates heavily on GPU driver stability, networking stack race conditions, and virtualization memory safety. Filesystem repairs, memory management corrections, and targeted hardware enablement quirks round out the release before the stable kernel drops. Users running custom builds or rolling distributions should test RC7 now to catch remaining edge cases before the official launch.

SUSE 5670 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

SUSE released a collection of moderate security updates to address flaws in git-bug, freerdp, erlang27, ansible, and several other packages. You will find that these patches resolve anywhere from one to over forty distinct CVEs depending on the specific software component. IT teams should install these fixes quickly to close the security gaps before malicious actors can take advantage of them. Getting the latest versions on your systems will help maintain a stable and secure operating environment.

openSUSE-SU-2026:10949-1: moderate: git-bug-0.10.1-5.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10948-1: moderate: freerdp-3.26.0-3.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10947-1: moderate: erlang27-27.1.3-2.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10945-1: moderate: ansible-core-2.20-2.20.6-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10944-1: moderate: ansible-13-13.7.0-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10941-1: moderate: trivy-0.71.0-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10940-1: moderate: python311-pip-26.1.2-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10943-1: moderate: amazon-ssm-agent-3.3.4624.0-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10942-1: moderate: 7zip-26.01-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10946-1: moderate: assimp-devel-6.0.5-3.1 on GA media

Slackware 1268 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Slackware 15.0 has released a critical security update for its Samba package to address multiple high severity vulnerabilities. This new version patches dangerous flaws that could allow unauthenticated attackers to execute arbitrary code or bypass authentication mechanisms. Administrators should prioritize installing the upgrade immediately to protect their file sharing and directory services from potential compromise. You can download the updated packages directly from the official Slackware FTP server and apply them using the standard package upgrade command.

samba (SSA:2026-158-01)

Red Hat 9430 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Fedora Linux 9378 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Fedora 44 administrators should immediately apply two critical security patches that address severe vulnerabilities in core system components. The Chromium browser update upgrades the software to version 149.0.7827.53 and resolves over four hundred distinct security flaws ranging from memory corruption to type confusion errors. Meanwhile, the Haveged daemon receives version 1.9.22 which fixes systemd sandboxing issues and patches a privilege escalation vulnerability tied to its command socket. Users can deploy both fixes quickly by running the standard dnf upgrade command with the respective advisory identifiers provided in the official release notes.

Fedora 44 Update: chromium-149.0.7827.53-1.fc44
Fedora 44 Update: haveged-1.9.22-1.fc44

Debian 10945 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Debian administrators received a batch of urgent security advisories targeting several widely used software packages. The patches address severe vulnerabilities across Apache2, the GNU C Library, Request Tracker, Nginx, and Chromium that could allow attackers to crash systems, execute malicious code, or steal sensitive information. System operators should prioritize upgrading to the recommended versions right away to close these dangerous attack vectors. These fixes span both extended support and current stable releases to maintain security across different Debian environments.

[DLA 4620-1] apache2 security update
ELA-1752-1 apache2 security update
[DLA 4621-1] glibc security update
[DSA 6327-1] request-tracker4 security update
[DSA 6326-1] nginx security update
[DSA 6325-1] chromium security update

AlmaLinux 2577 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

AlmaLinux released three kernel security errata for version 9 to address a wide array of system vulnerabilities. These notifications cover important and moderate severity issues while patching dozens of CVEs across networking and virtualization stacks. Dangerous flaws like Dirty Frag privilege escalation and unauthorized file access require immediate attention from system operators. You should apply these packages quickly to keep your servers secure.

ALSA-2026:21556: kernel security update (Important)
ALSA-2026:18587: kernel security update (Moderate)
ALSA-2026:19568: kernel security update (Important)
2026-06-07

Security 10959 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

This week demands immediate action from every Linux system administrator because a massive wave of security patches just dropped across all major distributions. Critical vulnerabilities in Samba and the core kernel now allow attackers to execute remote code or escalate privileges without any user interaction. Web servers, mail daemons, and foundational crypto libraries like OpenSSL also receive urgent fixes that directly protect encrypted traffic from man-in-the-middle attacks. You must run the correct package manager commands for your exact release right now since skipping these updates leaves your entire infrastructure wide open to automated ransomware campaigns.

SUSE 5670 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

OpenSUSE Tumbleweed has released a batch of moderate security updates targeting several widely used software packages across its general availability media. These patches address numerous common vulnerabilities including critical flaws in Grafana, OpenSSH, MariaDB development libraries, and FFmpeg alongside older issues affecting Perl modules and chemical data tools. Administrators should prioritize installing these fixes immediately since some remote code execution risks carry high CVSS scores that could compromise system integrity. Regular maintenance cycles will help keep your infrastructure secure while preventing potential exploitation of the newly disclosed CVE identifiers.

openSUSE-SU-2026:10938-1: moderate: perl-HTTP-Daemon-6.170.0-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10937-1: moderate: openssh-10.3p1-6.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10939-1: moderate: perl-IO-Compress-2.220.0-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10936-1: moderate: libopenbabel8-3.2.0-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10935-1: moderate: libmozjs-115-0-115.15.0-9.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10934-1: moderate: libmariadbd-devel-11.8.8-1.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10931-1: moderate: ffmpeg-4-4.4.7-3.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10933-1: moderate: hauler-1.4.3-5.1 on GA media
openSUSE-SU-2026:10932-1: moderate: grafana-11.6.14+security04-1.1 on GA media

Rocky Linux 926 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Administrators managing Rocky Linux environments should prioritize these critical patches for unbound, php, bind9.16, and thunderbird. The updates address multiple vulnerabilities across both version eight and version ten of the distribution. Each advisory includes a CVSS base score to help you evaluate the risk level before deployment. You can find complete installation details and official errata references by visiting the provided Rocky Linux links.

RLSA-2026:23231: Important: unbound security update
RLSA-2026:23388: Important: php security update
RLSA-2026:23360: Important: bind9.16 security update
RLSA-2026:22643: Important: thunderbird security update

Fedora Linux 9378 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Fedora administrators should immediately deploy these critical security patches across both version 43 and version 44 environments. The updates address several dangerous vulnerabilities within essential packages like Keylime, libssh2, perl-CryptX, and NASM. Each release tackles a distinct threat vector that could otherwise enable remote attackers to bypass authentication checks or trigger arbitrary code execution through malformed data inputs. System owners can quickly apply the necessary corrections by executing the standard dnf upgrade command with the specific advisory identifiers listed in the notification headers.

Fedora 43 Update: keylime-7.14.2-1.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: perl-CryptX-0.089-1.fc43
Fedora 43 Update: libssh2-1.11.1-6.fc43
Fedora 44 Update: nasm-3.01-3.fc44
Fedora 44 Update: keylime-7.14.2-1.fc44
Fedora 44 Update: perl-CryptX-0.089-1.fc44

Debian 10945 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Debian administrators must upgrade Dovecot, Request Tracker5, Apache2, and Tomcat9 to address a wave of critical vulnerabilities. These security advisories patch dangerous flaws ranging from denial of service crashes and path traversal errors to authentication bypasses and cross site scripting risks. Each package requires specific version updates tailored to either the oldstable or stable Debian releases, with some upgrades also demanding compatible native library revisions. System operators should verify their current configurations before applying these patches to ensure uninterrupted service across all affected components.

ELA-1751-1 dovecot security update
[DSA 6324-1] request-tracker5 security update
[DSA 6323-1] apache2 security update
[DLA 4619-1] tomcat9 security update

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