RSS Bot Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago http://blog.armbian.com/content/images/2026/01/coverleter.pngWelcome to the latest Armbian Newsletter: your source for the latest developments, community highlights, and behind-the-scenes updates from the world of open-source ARM and RISC-V computing.http://blog.armbian.com/content/images/2026/01/image-2.pngJoin Armbian at embedded world 2026. Meet us in Hall 3, Booth 3-556 (Seeed Studio), where we’ll be showcasing the Armbian build framework and how it powers reliable, production-ready Linux for ARM devices.FriendlyElec’s NanoPC T6 Plus: The flagship edge computing powerhouse and media stationThe NanoPC T6 Plus, powered by the performance-optimized Armbian OS, is your ticket to a truly professional, high-speed edge computing experience. This industrial-grade device is built around the flagship Octa-core Rockchip RK3588 SoC and now features a massive upgrade to LPDDR5 RAM (up to 32GB), giving it the muscle tohttp://blog.armbian.com/content/images/icon/favicon-40.icoArmbian blogMecid Urgancihttp://blog.armbian.com/content/images/thumbnail/T6-Plus-01.pngSponsoredGithub HighlightsThis week’s Armbian development saw a wide range of updates focused on automation, hardware support, and workflow improvements. Key highlights include the introduction of automatic YAML target generation, expanded support for Hetzner ARM64 runners, and enhancements to the redirector update workflow with cache mirror support. Several board-specific fixes andhttp://blog.armbian.com/content/images/icon/favicon-36.icoArmbian blogMichael Robinsonhttp://blog.armbian.com/content/images/thumbnail/githubhighlights-2-2.webpForget third-party utilities: meet Armbian ImagerArmbian Imager eliminates the guesswork from flashing SBC images. Real-time board detection, persistent caching, and built-in safety make installation fast, simple, and risk-freehttp://blog.armbian.com/content/images/icon/favicon-37.icoArmbian blogDaniele Brigugliohttp://blog.armbian.com/content/images/thumbnail/introducing-armbian-imager.pngArmbian 2025: by the numbersOpen hardware is growing faster than ever and breaking in new ways. 2025 has been a productive year for the Armbian project. As the Single Board Computer ecosystem continues to fragment and expand, Armbian has consolidated its position as the universal glue holding the open-source hardware world together. Our missionhttp://blog.armbian.com/content/images/icon/favicon-39.icoArmbian blogMichael Robinsonhttp://blog.armbian.com/content/images/thumbnail/New_review1.pngView the full article
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