Canonical Launches ARM Laptop Certification Program to Boost Ubuntu’s Next Generation of Mobile Computing

Canonical Launches ARM Laptop Certification Program to Boost Ubuntu’s Next Generation of Mobile Computing

Canonical is expanding its hardware certification efforts with a new focus on ARM-powered laptops, a move that reflects the growing momentum behind ARM architecture in the personal computing market. As ARM processors become increasingly common in laptops thanks to their impressive balance of performance, battery life, and efficiency, Canonical aims to ensure that Ubuntu users receive a seamless experience on this emerging class of hardware.

The initiative represents another step in Ubuntu’s long-standing effort to provide reliable Linux support across a wide range of devices while strengthening relationships with hardware manufacturers.

Why ARM Laptops Matter More Than Ever

For years, x86 processors from Intel and AMD dominated the laptop market. However, the landscape has changed significantly as ARM-based systems have become more powerful and capable.

Modern ARM laptops offer several advantages:

  • Longer battery life
  • Lower power consumption
  • Reduced heat output
  • Always-on connectivity capabilities
  • Competitive performance for everyday workloads

As manufacturers increasingly invest in ARM hardware, Linux distributions face growing pressure to ensure compatibility matches what users expect from traditional x86 systems. Canonical has already spent years supporting ARM across cloud, server, IoT, and embedded environments, making laptops a natural next step.

What the Certification Program Does

The new certification effort builds upon Canonical’s existing Ubuntu Certified Hardware program, which validates systems through extensive testing covering both hardware and operating system functionality. Certified devices undergo comprehensive verification to ensure Ubuntu operates correctly across critical components and daily workflows.

Testing typically includes:

  • Wireless networking
  • Audio functionality
  • Graphics performance
  • Bluetooth support
  • USB device compatibility
  • Power management
  • Suspend and resume behavior
  • Firmware integration
  • Security features such as TPM support

The goal is to eliminate the uncertainty that Linux users sometimes face when purchasing new hardware.

Creating a Better Ubuntu Experience on ARM

Historically, Linux support on ARM laptops has varied significantly between devices. Some systems work exceptionally well, while others require manual configuration, custom kernels, or vendor-specific patches.

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Btrfs Snapshot Deletion Gets Faster as Developers Tackle One of the Filesystem’s Biggest Pain Points

Btrfs Snapshot Deletion Gets Faster as Developers Tackle One of the Filesystem’s Biggest Pain Points

The Btrfs filesystem continues to receive significant performance tuning, and one of the latest areas of focus is snapshot deletion performance. While Btrfs snapshots have long been praised for their speed, flexibility, and efficient use of storage, deleting large numbers of snapshots has historically been one of the filesystem’s most resource-intensive operations.

Recent kernel development efforts are helping address that problem by improving metadata handling, reducing lock contention, and streamlining internal cleanup processes. The result is faster snapshot removal and less disruption on systems that rely heavily on snapshots for backups, rollbacks, and system recovery.

Why Snapshot Deletion Has Been Challenging

Btrfs is a copy-on-write (CoW) filesystem that stores data and metadata in a highly interconnected structure. This design enables many advanced features, including:

  • Instant snapshots
  • Subvolumes
  • Checksumming
  • Compression
  • Efficient data sharing between snapshots

However, the same architecture that makes snapshots so efficient to create can make them more complex to remove. When a snapshot is deleted, Btrfs must determine which blocks are still referenced by other snapshots and which can be safely reclaimed. On systems with many snapshots, this process can generate significant metadata activity.

Recent Performance Improvements

Developers have been working to reduce overhead associated with Btrfs metadata operations, which directly impacts snapshot cleanup performance.

Recent kernel updates include:

  • Reduced lock contention during extent tree operations
  • More efficient extent buffer traversal
  • Improved handling of internal filesystem structures
  • Reduced contention during metadata searches
  • General transaction and cleanup optimizations

These changes help the filesystem spend less time waiting on internal locks and more time performing actual cleanup work.

Less Impact During Cleanup Operations

One common complaint among Btrfs users has been elevated I/O activity during large snapshot deletion jobs.

On systems that maintain dozens, or even hundreds, of snapshots, cleanup operations could temporarily increase:

  • Disk activity
  • CPU usage
  • I/O wait times
  • Metadata processing workloads

Recent improvements are designed to make these operations less disruptive by reducing bottlenecks inside the filesystem’s metadata management code.

For users running backup servers, NAS appliances, or snapshot-heavy desktop systems, these optimizations can improve overall responsiveness while cleanup tasks run in the background.

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LibreOffice gives its Ribbon-style UI a pop of colour

You’ll be able to customise the look of LibreOffice’s Tabbed UI in the free office suite’s next major release, which his due out in August 2026. LibreOffice 26.8’s Tabbed UI (also known as the Notebookbar and modelled after the Ribbon in Microsoft Office) can show a colourful background when application theming is enabled under Tools > Options > Appearance. A blue shade is used by default but you can pick or set any colour you like. In the ‘Customisations’ section, first selected the Writer, Calc, Impress or Data Notebookbar value, then use the dropdown to chance the colour. Click apply […]

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Microsoft brings Rust Coreutils to Windows – natively

Windows logo with a hand reaching out to grab the Coreutils logo.Microsoft has released Coreutils for Windows, allowing a stack of familiar “Linux-like” command-line utilities to run natively on Windows. The project is based on uutils, the Rust-based reimplementation of GNU coreutils that Ubuntu (mostly) has adopted in recent releases. Microsoft’s package bundles uutils’ coreutils and findutils as well as a GNU-compatible grep in a single binary. It offers tools like cat, cp, ls, mv and uptime. Commands that use POSIX-only features are excluded, meaning chmod, chown, kill and others aren’t included. What’s notable – *nix tools working their way into the Windows ecosystem is notable – is that this isn’t […]

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Firefox Android Play Integrity check hits custom ROMs

Cartoon sewer pipe leaking green toxic sludge with Mozilla logo emblem inside pipe opening.Mozilla has added support for Google’s Play Integrity API, known for blocking users of custom ROMs from accessing banking apps, to Firefox for Android. Per a resolved issue in Mozilla’s public tracker, a new lib-integrity-googleplay library was added to Firefox’s Android codebase. It requests a Play Integrity token which is then passed to Mozilla’s MLPA (Machine Learning Proxy) server. The token is used to access Firefox’s server-side AI tools, like Smart Window, for rate-limiting purposes, ensuring only unmodified, Play-installed copies of Firefox on Google-certified devices use Mozilla’s compute infra. Per documentation for the API, developers can: “…call the Integrity API […] to […]

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