Liquorix Linux Kernel 7.0-1 released

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The new Liquorix Linux Kernel 7.0-1 has been released, featuring aggressive interactivity tweaks that enhance desktop responsiveness, particularly under heavy loads. It employs a two-millisecond scheduling timeslice, shifts to more efficient disk schedulers, and modifies CPU frequency scaling to reduce idle time during brief bursts of activity, making it ideal for users focused on gaming and audio latency. Installation on Debian or Ubuntu systems is simplified to a single curl command that manages dependencies and avoids overwriting existing kernels. While the new kernel improves responsiveness, it may lead to slightly higher power consumption due to its aggressive performance optimizations



Liquorix Linux Kernel 7.0-1 released

The first Liquorix kernel built around the Linux 7 series swaps standard power saving defaults for aggressive interactivity tweaks that keep desktops feeling snappy under heavy loads. It forces a two millisecond scheduling timeslice, switches to kyber or bfq disk schedulers, and rewrites CPU frequency scaling to stop idling during short bursts of activity. Installing it on Debian or Ubuntu systems takes just one curl command that handles dependencies and drops the new binaries straight into your package manager. Desktop users chasing smoother frame pacing or tighter audio latency will notice the difference immediately, though you should expect slightly higher power draw when the processor refuses to idle.

Liquorix Linux Kernel 7.0-1 released @ Linux Compatible