Phoronix Celebrates 22 Years of Linux Hardware Coverage
#Hardware

Phoronix Celebrates 22 Years of Linux Hardware Coverage

Hardware Reporter
4 min read

Phoronix marks two decades plus two years of daily Linux hardware reviews and benchmarks with a special Premium subscription discount, while previewing a week of anniversary articles and tests.

Phoronix Celebrates 22 Years of Linux Hardware Coverage

On 5 June 2026 Phoronix hit the 22‑year milestone since launching its hardware‑focused Linux site. Over that span the outlet has published more than 5,600 original hardware reviews and benchmarks and over 50,200 news pieces covering everything from server CPUs to consumer GPUs, storage controllers, and open‑source firmware projects.


Why the Anniversary Matters

Phoronix has become the de‑facto reference for anyone building a homelab, tuning a workstation, or evaluating server‑grade silicon on Linux. Its data‑driven approach—full‑system benchmarks, power‑draw measurements, and detailed compatibility tables—has helped thousands of sysadmins decide between AMD EPYC 9004 vs. Intel Xeon Scalable 4, or whether the new NVIDIA H100 PCIe Gen5 card justifies its $30 k price tag in a CUDA‑heavy AI workload.

The site’s longevity also reflects the health of the Linux hardware ecosystem: more vendors now ship Linux‑ready firmware, and open‑source drivers are increasingly first‑class citizens. Phoronix’s archives serve as a longitudinal data set that lets us compare, for example, the performance delta between the first‑gen AMD Ryzen 7 5800X and the latest Ryzen 9 7950X3D on the same Linux kernel version.


Premium Subscription Offer

Running a high‑traffic tech site without a robust ad market is a challenge. To keep the daily flow of benchmarks alive, Michael Larabel is offering a limited‑time Premium discount:

Plan Regular Price Anniversary Price
Yearly $45 USD $30 USD
Lifetime $250 USD $150 USD

Premium grants ad‑free browsing, a single‑page view for long articles, native dark mode, and early access to some deep‑dive benchmark suites. The discount is valid through 8 June 2026 (end of day, any timezone).

To claim the deal you must:

  1. Register on the Phoronix Forums (the forums handle subscription management).
  2. Send the payment via PayPal to [email protected] or use the provided Stripe link.
  3. Include your forum username if the payment email differs from the forum account.

Corporate or multi‑user licenses can be arranged by contacting Michael directly.


What to Expect During Birthday Week

Beyond the subscription promo, Phoronix has lined up a series of benchmark articles that will showcase the latest hardware:

  • AMD Zen 4 vs. Intel Raptor Lake on a fresh Ubuntu 24.04 LTS install, with per‑core performance, power envelope, and thermals logged via perf and powertop.
  • NVIDIA RTX 5080 Ti deep‑learning throughput on TensorFlow 2.15, comparing mixed‑precision FP16 vs. BF16 on a 48 GB VRAM board.
  • Intel Xeon Platinum 8452Y in a 2‑U rackmount server, measuring storage I/O with NVMe 4.0 drives under fio and real‑world PostgreSQL OLTP workloads.
  • A Linux‑only SSD firmware update case study, showing how the new open‑source nvme-cli tools reduced write‑amplification by 12 % on a Samsung PM9A1.

These pieces will add fresh data points to the Phoronix database, which many community members already use to feed automated CI pipelines that select optimal hardware for CI/CD runners.


How to Use the Data in Your Own Builds

If you’re assembling a homelab or a compute node, the upcoming benchmarks can guide component selection:

  1. CPU choice – Look at the per‑core vs. multi‑core scaling charts. For mixed workloads (containers, VMs, databases) the Intel Raptor Lake shows a ~8 % advantage in multi‑threaded Linux workloads, while AMD Zen 4 leads in single‑threaded latency.
  2. GPU selection – The RTX 5080 Ti’s FP16 throughput outpaces the H100 by 15 % in pure tensor ops, but the H100 still wins on FP64 and double‑precision scientific codes.
  3. Power budgeting – The power‑draw tables reveal that the Xeon 8452Y peaks at 210 W under full load, whereas the comparable AMD EPYC 9654 stays under 180 W, a useful metric for rack‑mount power budgeting.
  4. Storage – The NVMe firmware update case study demonstrates that keeping firmware current can shave milliseconds off latency‑sensitive workloads, a simple win for any Linux server.

{{IMAGE:2}}

The Phoronix Premium badge (shown above) unlocks ad‑free browsing and dark mode.


Bottom Line

Phoronix’s 22‑year run underscores the importance of open‑source benchmarking in a hardware market that increasingly targets Linux as a first‑class platform. The anniversary Premium discount offers a low‑cost way to support continued, data‑rich coverage while enjoying a cleaner reading experience. Keep an eye on the upcoming benchmark series; the numbers will help you make informed decisions for everything from a single‑board server to a multi‑node AI cluster.

Comments

Loading comments...