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If your company wants to sell IoT or edge gear in the EU, Canonical's minimal, immutable distro is worth a serious look.
You want a rock-solid Linux distro that you can count on for 15 years for edge computing and Internet of Things (IoT) devices? Check out Ubuntu Core 26, Canonical's latest long-term support (LTS) distribution for mission‑critical and low‑latency AI workloads.
Also: Microsoft surprises with its first server Linux distribution: Azure Linux 4.0
For those unfamiliar with Ubuntu Core, it's a stripped-down, embedded Linux OS that takes regular Ubuntu and turns it into a minimal, containerized system, where the kernel, base OS, and apps are all delivered as snaps. Ubuntu Core targets IoT, industrial, robotics, digital signage, appliances, and other edge deployments where you want predictable behavior, remote management, and robust over-the-air (OTA) updates rather than a general-purpose server or desktop.
Canonical is positioning Ubuntu Core as a hardened Linux distribution for devices that must run unattended for years. As with previous Core releases, each component is delivered as a sandboxed, cryptographically signed snap, maintaining a measured boot chain that only runs verified code. This is a Linux you can trust to run safely until 2041.
That's no small matter, since emerging security regulations, especially the EU Cyber Resilience Act (CRA), require clear component provenance, long-term stability, and accountability across the stack. As Jon Seager, Canonical's VP of Ubuntu Engineering, said in a blog post: "With Ubuntu Core 26, we continue to deliver the foundation that critical infrastructure operators need to meet the CRA, run attested, immutable edge AI workloads, and manage devices securely at scale."
A major theme in Ubuntu Core 26 is cutting the cost and friction of provisioning and maintaining large device fleets. Canonical says an improved snap‑delta format reduces OTA update sizes by 50% to 90% for most snaps, with updates to Core base snaps shrinking from around 16MB to just 1.5MB. In addition, new initramfs‑based installation paths avoid redundant reboots by default, speeding up first‑boot provisioning and making device rollout faster and more predictable.
